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Synchronous behavioural shifts in reef fishes linked to mass coral bleaching

Author

Listed:
  • Sally A. Keith

    (Lancaster University
    University of Copenhagen)

  • Andrew H. Baird

    (James Cook University)

  • Jean-Paul A. Hobbs

    (Curtin University)

  • Erika S. Woolsey

    (The Hydrous
    Stanford University, Hasso Plattner Institute of Design & The Center for Ocean Solutions)

  • Andrew S. Hoey

    (James Cook University)

  • N. Fadli

    (Syiah Kuala University)

  • Nathan J. Sanders

    (University of Vermont)

Abstract

Mass coral bleaching causes population declines and mortality of coral reef species1 yet its impacts on behaviour are largely unknown. Here, we unite behavioural theory with community ecology to test whether bleaching-induced mass mortality of corals can cause consistent changes in the behaviour of coral-feeding fishes. We documented 5,259 encounters between individuals of 38 Chaetodon (butterflyfish) species on 17 reefs within the central Indo-Pacific, of which 3,828 were repeated on 10 reefs both before and after the global coral bleaching event in 2016. Aggression between butterflyfishes decreased by two-thirds following large-scale coral mortality, despite no significant change in fish abundance or community composition. Pairwise encounters were most likely to be aggressive between obligate corallivores and on reefs with high coral cover. After bleaching, the proportion of preferred Acropora corals in the diet decreased significantly (up to 85% fewer bites), with no increase in overall bite rate to compensate for the loss of these nutritionally rich corals. The observed reduced aggression at low resource levels due to nutritional deficit follows the predictions of the economic theory of aggressive behaviour2,3. Our results reveal synchronous changes in behaviour in response to coral mortality. Such changes could potentially disrupt territories4, leading to reorganization of ecological communities.

Suggested Citation

  • Sally A. Keith & Andrew H. Baird & Jean-Paul A. Hobbs & Erika S. Woolsey & Andrew S. Hoey & N. Fadli & Nathan J. Sanders, 2018. "Synchronous behavioural shifts in reef fishes linked to mass coral bleaching," Nature Climate Change, Nature, vol. 8(11), pages 986-991, November.
  • Handle: RePEc:nat:natcli:v:8:y:2018:i:11:d:10.1038_s41558-018-0314-7
    DOI: 10.1038/s41558-018-0314-7
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    Cited by:

    1. F. Javier González-Barrios & Sally A. Keith & Michael J. Emslie & Daniela M. Ceccarelli & Gareth J. Williams & Nicholas A. J. Graham, 2025. "Emergent patterns of reef fish diversity correlate with coral assemblage shifts along the Great Barrier Reef," Nature Communications, Nature, vol. 16(1), pages 1-11, December.

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