Fishing, Trophic Cascades, and the Process of Grazing on Coral Reefs
American Museum of Natural History · University of the West Indies System · +4 more institutions
Abstract
Since the mass mortality of the urchin Diadema antillarum in 1983, parrotfishes have become the dominant grazer on Caribbean reefs. The grazing capacity of these fishes could be impaired if marine reserves achieve their long-term goal of restoring large consumers, several of which prey on parrotfishes. Here we compare the negative impacts of enhanced predation with the positive impacts of reduced fishing mortality on parrotfishes inside reserves. Because large-bodied parrotfishes escape the risk of predation from a large piscivore (the Nassau grouper), the predation effect reduced grazing by only 4 to 8%. This impact was overwhelmed by the increase in density of large parrotfishes, resulting in a net doubling…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 49.63
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 20
Authors
14- PJPeter J. MumbyCorresponding
American Museum of Natural History, University of the West Indies System, University of Exeter, Jupiter Medical Center, Pacific University
- CPCraig P. Dahlgren
American Museum of Natural History, University of the West Indies System, University of Exeter, Jupiter Medical Center, Pacific University
- ARAlastair R. Harborne
American Museum of Natural History, University of the West Indies System, University of Exeter, Jupiter Medical Center, Pacific University
- CVCarrie V. Kappel
American Museum of Natural History, University of the West Indies System, University of Exeter, Jupiter Medical Center, Pacific University
- FMFiorenza Micheli
American Museum of Natural History, University of the West Indies System, University of Exeter, Jupiter Medical Center, Pacific University
Topics & keywords
- Trophic cascade
- Parrotfish
- Coral reef
- Marine reserve
- Ecology
- Predation
- Biology
- Grazing
- Life below water