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butterflyfishas indicator of reef species

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relation ship between coral and coral reef fishes – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: butterflyfishas indicator of reef species


1
Prepared by Hermon Ghebreslassie Id/No
12/027

Advisor Mr Selvam R Nath
2
Introduction
  • Coral reefs are beautiful vibrant underwater
    cities, home to one hundred thousand different
    species of sea creatures.
  • Coral reefs are only found in tropical and
    sub-tropical waters around the world. However,
    since ocean currents can bring warm water to
    cooler places, reef corals grow in surprising
    locations. Coral reefs in different parts of the
    world vary in the number and composition of coral
    species.
  • Corals are fundamental in providing essential
    habitat and resources for numerous sedentary and
    mobile organisms.
  • Corallivorous ?shes are foremost in their
    association ,with coral habitats, as they have an
    obvious dependence on corals for food in addition
    to shelter and living space.

3
  • corals were largely inaccessible as a viable prey
    source, and that there were very few ?shes
    capable of feeding directly on corals.
  • corallivorous ?shes impose more permanent and
    chronic pressures on scleractinian corals and are
    thus assumed to have limited overall impact on
    prey corals .
  • Corallivorous ?shes are generally assumed to have
    very minimal in?uence on distribution, abundance
    or community structure of potential prey corals
  • Corallivorous they feed-
  • coral mucous (e.g. Ornate butter?y ?sh, Chaetodon
    ornatissimus, Chaetodontidae),
  • coral polyps (e.g. chevron butter?y ?sh,
    Chaetodon trifascialis, Chaetodontidae)
  • coral skeleton (guieneafowl puffer, Arothron
    meleagris, Tetraodontidae).
  • coral cover and the abundance of corallivores,
    primarily chaetodontids

4
  • How widespread is corallivory?
  • -corallivory is taxonomically wide spread,
    and has been documented in at least 128 species
    and 11 reef-?sh families.
  • While the butter?y ?sh account for just over half
    of the known corallivores (69 species), this
    feeding mode is
  • other families such as the- Labridae,
    Tetraodontidae, Monacanthidae, Pomacentridae,
    Scaridae and Balistidae, which all have between
    seven and ten corallivorous species

5
  • Role of Corallivores in coral reef ecosystem
  • Estimation of coral consumption by Corallivores
    are fundamental to understanding their role in
    coral reef dynamics.
  • Given the substantial number of ?sh species that
    feed on corals it is likely that the Corallivores
    link in the coral reef food web.
  • Corallivorous ?shes have some of the longest
    intestines of all ?shes which facilitates high
    gut retention times and may allow the digestion
    of wax easters.
  • logically, on higher-diversity reefs the depth of
    corallivore interactions with the coral community
    will likely increase, thus increasing the net
    transport of energy up the food web.
  • mortality associated with predation is often
    cited as being very low, at least for coral
    feeding butter?y ?sh .Individuals of several
    coral-feeding butter?y ?sh have been observed
    occupying the same home ranges over several years
    ,as they are relatively long-lived.
  • Types of corallivorous
  • Corallivorous ?shes can be broadly divided into
    obligate corallivores or facultative corallivores
  • Corallivores as obligate when more than 80 of
    their diet is centred on coral ,these species are
    highly dependent on coral for their survival

6
  • Coral feeders primarily target scleractinian
    (hard) corals,
  • although several species (e.g. black-backed
    butter?y ?sh, Chaetodon melannotus,
    Chaetodontidae) feed extensively on alcyonarian
    (soft) corals
  • Chaetodon melannotus
  • Butter?y fishes are the only corallivores found
    to consume soft coral all other corallivorous
    families have only been observed to feed on
    scleractinian coral.

7
Spatial variation during dietary composition
  • The dietary composition of individual corallivore
    species can vary among geographic locations and
    between habitats.
  • The adaptation to feed on coral is largely
    con?ned to the Indo-Paci?c and the Red Sea.
  • Impact of corallivores on the coral communities
  • The majority of corallivorous ?shes can be
    classed as polyp-feeders, removing coral tissue
    without harming the underlying corallite.
  • They have a limitation on their feeding behaviour
  • concentrate feeding on only a subset of coral
    species
  • To maintain their on going food source
  • A balance must be met between feeding intensity
    and coral regeneration

8
Others coralivores ingest large amount of biting
of growing tips- (balestids tetradontids).
  • Corallivores have a dual role on reefs in
    addition to being a coral predator they are also
    important in reef association through
    bio-erosion.
  • The amount of material removed by corallivores
    who ingest skeletal material.eg, guineafowl
    puffer, teardrop butter?y ?sh
  • Availability of teardrop butter?y ?sh decreased
    the ability of Montipora verrucosa to compete
    for space.
  • pocilopora compressa
  • The impact of corallivory may be more seen under
    conditions where coral has been depleted owing to
    other disturbances .

9
THE CONCEPT OF INDICATOR SPECIES
  • Butterfly fishes of the family Chaetodontidae are
    visible inhabitants of coral reefs throughout the
    world.
  • Many species are obligate Corallivores, they
    depend on live tissue.
  • Because their metabolic or energetic demand
    linked to the overall condition or "health" of
    the coral.
  • They are indicators of changes in conditions on
    the coral reef.
  • They are intimately related on which they fed.
  • The distribution and abundance of these fishes
    should be directly correlated with the
    distribution and abundance of the corals.

10
  • If the corals are adversely affected by
    stressful environmental conditions, such as
    chronic low levels of pollution, their health
    will deteriorate.
  • This deterioration should be detected by the
    fishes which feed on them. In many species of
    organisms, sub-lethal levels of stress cause
    reallocation of available energy.
  • first proposed that obligate Corallivores, such
    as many species of butterfly fishes, could serve
    as indicator organisms.
  • Behavioural Ecology of Butterfly fishes
  • The butterfly fishes, are found in all tropical
    seas of the world.
  • 114 species in 10 genera
  • diurnally active brightly colored.
  • monogamous pairs and broadly territorial
  • There is preferential mating and pair bond
    formation based on size.
  • They are dusk and broadcast spawners ,no parental
    care
  • Coral feeder chaetodontids have high degree of
    faithfulness with same individual in the same
    territories
  • Life span is 10 to 12 years

11
Behavioural Ecology of Butterfly fishes
  • The butterfly fishes, are found in all tropical
    seas of the world.114 species in 10 genera
  • diurnally active brightly colored.
  • monogamous pairs and broadly territorial
  • There is preferential mating and pair bond
    formation based on size.
  • They are dusk and broadcast spawners ,no parental
    care
  • Coral feeder chaetodontids have high degree of
    faithfulness.
  • with same individual in the same territories
  • Life span is 10 to 12 years
  • butterfly fishes ideal candidates for indicator
    species of ecological conditions on coral reefs.

12
Butterfly fishes as Indicator Species
  • sensitive biotic indicators are most useful when
    one wishes to detect low levels of chronic alarms
    such as low levels of chemical pollutants or
    small changes in temperature or nutrient levels.
  • Over time such low levels of chronic alarms can
    have marked harmful effects on the ecosystem they
    are impacting.
  • Yet it is extremely difficult and expensive to
    develop a sampling system to detect such low
    levels.
  • Under such condition that sensitive biological
    indicators are most useful.

13
  • First doesnt need a sensitive indicator for
    occurring irregular interval, terrible events
    like oil spills or storms.
  • The second point of importance is that not all
    chaetodontids are candidates for indicator
    species.
  • The planktivores are feed on planktons and the
    omnivores feed up on benthic invertebrate, coral
    on algae So as the prey changes.
  • The coral feeding chaetodontids make ideal
    indicators because they are directly dependent on
    the corals.
  • obligate corallivores and do not feed on anything
    else.
  • They show strong preferences for certain species
    of corals which provides a further dimension of
    sensitivity to the system.
  • Since they are territorial, strongly site
    attached, and live for many years

14
  • If changes happens slowly, the corals will
    decline through time
  • A reef which is dead from siltation or from
    crown-of-thorns no longer has its characteristic
    meeting of coral feeding chaetodontids.
  • There appears to be a beginning level of reef
    deterioration at which the fishes begin to leave,
  • The size of Corallivores butterfly fishes
    territories are determined by the amount of coral
    food contained there in
  • removal of coral from territories results in
    pairs of fish attempting to enlarge their
    territories at the expense of their neighbours
    which results in increased conflict level of
    behaviour.

15
Conclusion
  • At last as number of paired butterfly fishes
    increased in the territory the coral community is
    not deteriorate much but through certain effect
    it could have a chronic effect

16
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