Community assembly of coral reef fishes along the Melanesian biodiversity gradient

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Abstract

The Indo-Pacific is home to Earth’s most biodiverse coral reefs. Diversity on these reefs decreases from the Coral Triangle east through the islands of Melanesia. Despite this pattern having been identified during the early 20th century, our knowledge about the interaction between pattern and process remains incomplete. To evaluate the structure of coral reef fish communities across Melanesia, we obtained distributional records for 396 reef fish species in five taxa across seven countries. We used hierarchical clustering, nestedness, and multiple linear regression analyses to evaluate the community structure. We also compiled data on life history traits (pelagic larval duration, body size and schooling behavior) to help elucidate the ecological mechanisms behind community structure. Species richness for these taxa along the gradient was significantly related to longitude but not habitat area. Communities are significantly nested, indicating that species-poor communities are largely composed of subsets of the species found on species rich reefs. These trends are robust across taxonomic groups except for the Pomacentridae, which exhibit an anti-nested pattern, perhaps due to a large number of endemic species. Correlations between life history traits and the number of reefs on which species occurred indicate that dispersal and survival ability contribute to determining community structure. We conclude that distance from the Coral Triangle dominates community structure in reef fish; however, conservation of the most species-rich areas will not be sufficient alone to conserve the vivid splendor of this region.

Figures

  • Fig 1. Map of Melanesia showing major archipelagos sampled in this study. Map made with ArcMap v10.3.1.
  • Fig 2. Relative species richness of each of five coral reef fish taxa reported from seven countries across Melanesia. Countries are ordered from west to east along the x-axis, with Papua New Guinea being the westernmost site.
  • Table 1. Reef area (km), longitude, number of species, and mean (stddev) occurrences of species in seven coral reef taxa reported from seven archipelagos across Melanesia.
  • Fig 3. Dendrogram of reef fish communities for five taxa (Balistidae, Chaetodontidae, Labridae, Monacanthidae, Pomacentridae) built on Jaccard distances and clustered using group averages. Clusters significant at p<0.01 are indicated with solid lines. All clusters are significant at p<0.05.
  • Table 2. Jaccard distance based on species presence-absences in reef communities across seven Melanesian countries. The first number in parentheses indicates the replacement (turnover) component of Jaccard distance following Carvalho et al. 2011, the second the turnover component following Baselga 2010.
  • Table 3. Results of nestedness analyses for all species. A metric of 100 indicates perfect nestedness. NODF stands for “Nested metric based on Overlap and Decreasing Fill” for the whole data set, NODF columns focuses on individual countries, and NODF rows focuses on species.
  • Table 4. Results of nestedness analyses for species split based on schooling behavior. Islands were ordered longitudinally. A metric of 100 indicates perfect nestedness. NODF (Nested metric based on Overlap and Decreasing Fill) for the whole data set, NODF columns focuses on individual countries, and NODF rows focuses on species.
  • Table 5. Parameter estimates from linear mixed-effect models predicting log geographic extent in km. Phylogenetic relatedness was factored out using random effects. Two models were evaluated, as larval duration data were available for only a subset of the fish taxa.

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CITATION STYLE

APA

Drew, J. A., & Amatangelo, K. L. (2017). Community assembly of coral reef fishes along the Melanesian biodiversity gradient. PLoS ONE, 12(10). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0186123

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