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Universitas Hasanuddin
Research output:Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

High temporal resolution sampling reveals reef fish settlement is highly clustered

Piercy J.

Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences

Q1
Published: 2018Citations: 1

Abstract

Coral reef fish larvae settle on reefs predominantly at night around the new-moon phase, after an early developmental period spent in the pelagic environment. Most sampling is conducted across whole nights, and any studies that have examined the frequency of arrival within nights have typically been limited to coarse sampling time scales of 1–5 h. Here, we present results for arrival numbers of fish caught between dusk and midnight from light traps sampled every 15 min at an Indonesian coral reef, providing the finest temporal resolution for this type of study to date. A spatial analysis by distance indices analysis, adapted to temporal data, revealed clustering of reef arrival times for many species, with an increase in catches immediately after dusk dropping off towards midnight. Importantly, the timing of clusters differed among species, indicating that different factors determine the timing of arrival among taxa. Our results support the hypothesis that larval behaviour influences the timing of arrival at a coral reef for different fish species.

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10.1139/cjfas-2016-0318

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Pelagic zoneSciences
Coral reefSciences
ReefSciences
Coral reef fishSciences
Sampling (signal processing)Sciences
FisherySciences
DuskSciences
EcologySciences
GeographySciences
CoralSciences
OceanographySciences
Environmental scienceSciences
BiologySciences
GeologySciences
Computer visionSciences
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