Editorial Type:
Article Category: Research Article
 | 
Online Publication Date: Jan 01, 2000

Encounter Rates of a Juvenile Reef Fish with Small and Predatory Fishes

Page Range: 36 – 41
DOI: 10.1643/0045-8511(2000)2000[0036:EROAJR]2.0.CO;2
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Abstract

Previous studies have shown that predation by large fishes (> 200 mm TL) is responsible for greater mortality rates of juvenile Acanthochromis polyacanthus on continuous than on patch reefs. Yet 43% of mortality on continuous reefs cannot be explained by these piscivores. I hypothesized that small predatory fishes are a source of this unaccounted mortality and tested the prediction that juvenile A. polyacanthus encounter small predatory fishes at a greater rate on continuous than on patch reefs. Of all fishes encountered by A. polyacanthus, fishes known to be potential predators of A. polyacanthus were most frequently encountered. There was a trend for A. polyacanthus to encounter these species at a greater rate on continuous than on patch reefs, but this was not supported by the analyses. This result highlights current uncertainty about sources of mortality in juvenile reef fishes. Future research is needed to establish the relative contribution of alternate sources of mortality to overall mortality so that the predictive power of hypotheses about processes that control reef fish abundance can be improved.

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Copyright: The American Society of Ichthyologists and Herpetologists
Fig. 1.
Fig. 1.

Mean number of encounters (± SE) for four predators per 15-min interval on continuous reef and patch reef (n = 12 observations of adult pairs per reef type)


Fig. 2.
Fig. 2.

Mean number of encounters (± SE) per 15-min interval between continuous reef and patch reef (n = 12 observations of adult pairs per reef type). Encounters are shown for (A) the sum of species that were most commonly (60%) encountered (P. moluccensis, A. polyacanthus, A. sexfasciatus, and T. lunare), (B) those species that Thresher (1983) defined as predators of A. polyacanthus (Table 2), and (C) all fish encountered


Accepted: Jun 21, 1999