Climate impacts alter fisheries productivity and turnover on coral reefs

Mark Hamilton, James P.W. Robinson, Cassandra E. Benkwitt, Shaun K. Wilson, M. Aaron MacNeil, Ameer Ebrahim, Nicholas A.J. Graham

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

17 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Alteration of benthic reef habitat after coral bleaching and mortality induces changes in fish assemblages, with implications for fisheries. Our understanding of climate impacts to coral reef fisheries is largely based on fish abundance and biomass. The rates at which biomass is produced and replenished (productivity and turnover) are also important to sustaining fisheries, yet the responses of these metrics following bleaching are largely unknown. Here, we examine changes in fish productivity and turnover after mass coral bleaching events in Seychelles, on reefs that were recovering to coral-dominated habitats and those that shifted to macroalgae-dominated regimes. Productivity of fish assemblages increased on all recovering reefs, particularly on fished reefs resulting in levels similar to protected reefs 19 years after bleaching. Herbivore-detritivores, such as scraping and excavating parrotfish, appeared to drive biomass production through increased abundance on recovering reefs. Productivity on regime-shifted reefs remained stable at 1994 levels in fished areas, with increases observed on protected reefs. Large increases in browser productivity (particularly on protected reefs), combined with increases for invertivores, maintained post-bleaching productivity on macroalgal reefs. For all diet groups, net turnover was generally higher on fished regime-shifted reefs than on recovering reefs, suggesting fish biomass is more readily replenished on macroalgal reefs. Reef structural complexity was a positive predictor of productivity for all diet groups. These findings indicate that post-bleaching reef fish productivity is strongly influenced by benthic recovery trajectories, and demonstrates the importance of herbivore and invertivore species in sustaining small-scale inshore fisheries following climatic disturbances.

Original languageEnglish
JournalCoral Reefs
DOIs
Publication statusAccepted/In press - 2022

Bibliographical note

Funding Information:
We thank Seychelles Fishing Authority, Seychelles National Parks Authority, and Nature Seychelles for logistical support and use of facilities during data collection. Simon Jennings collected fish data during reef surveys in 1994. We thank Renato A. Morais for helpful discussions and advice regarding fish productivity calculations, and two anonymous reviewers for constructive comments that substantially improved the manuscript. MH was funded by a studentship from the NERC Envision Doctoral Training Partnership (NE/S007423/1). JPWR was funded by an Early Career Fellowship from the Leverhulme Trust. CEB was funded by the Bertarelli Foundation as part of the Bertarelli Programme in Marine Science. NAJG was funded by a Royal Society University Research Fellowship (URF\R\201029) and a Philip Leverhulme Prize.

Publisher Copyright:
© 2022, The Author(s).

ASJC Scopus Subject Areas

  • Aquatic Science

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