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Fine sediments suppress detritivory on coral reefs

Fine sediments suppress detritivory on coral reefs
Fine sediments suppress detritivory on coral reefs
Increasing sediment inputs are recognised as an important factor leading to coral reef degradation. However, the role of sediments in ecological processes is poorly understood. This study used paired-choice trials to quantify the effects of sediment grain size and chemical composition on feeding by the abundant detritivorous reef fish, Ctenochaetus striatus. The size of sediments from algal turfs were also compared to those ingested by reef-dwelling C. striatus. Algal turfs containing coarser sediments were preferred by C. striatus, while sediment composition (reefal carbonates vs. riverine silicates) had little effect. On the reef, C. striatus ingested finer sediments than those present in algal turfs. C. striatus appears to prefer algal turfs with coarser sediments as this facilitates ingestion of fine detrital particles, while finer sediments prevent selective feeding on detritus. These findings suggest that fine sediments from terrestrial runoff or dredging may be detrimental to feeding by detritivorous species.
0025-326X
934-940
Tebbett, Sterling B
cdb96273-f8e9-4213-af08-1740215e4b37
Goatley, Christopher Harry Robert
b158dc1a-76f3-4ace-9d33-260d8c76ac93
Bellwood, David R
829e5839-9ac7-4f63-961c-8d0bf8caab8a
Tebbett, Sterling B
cdb96273-f8e9-4213-af08-1740215e4b37
Goatley, Christopher Harry Robert
b158dc1a-76f3-4ace-9d33-260d8c76ac93
Bellwood, David R
829e5839-9ac7-4f63-961c-8d0bf8caab8a

Tebbett, Sterling B, Goatley, Christopher Harry Robert and Bellwood, David R (2017) Fine sediments suppress detritivory on coral reefs. Marine Pollution Bulletin, 114 (2), 934-940. (doi:10.1016/j.marpolbul.2016.11.016).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Increasing sediment inputs are recognised as an important factor leading to coral reef degradation. However, the role of sediments in ecological processes is poorly understood. This study used paired-choice trials to quantify the effects of sediment grain size and chemical composition on feeding by the abundant detritivorous reef fish, Ctenochaetus striatus. The size of sediments from algal turfs were also compared to those ingested by reef-dwelling C. striatus. Algal turfs containing coarser sediments were preferred by C. striatus, while sediment composition (reefal carbonates vs. riverine silicates) had little effect. On the reef, C. striatus ingested finer sediments than those present in algal turfs. C. striatus appears to prefer algal turfs with coarser sediments as this facilitates ingestion of fine detrital particles, while finer sediments prevent selective feeding on detritus. These findings suggest that fine sediments from terrestrial runoff or dredging may be detrimental to feeding by detritivorous species.

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Published date: 30 January 2017

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 470216
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/470216
ISSN: 0025-326X
PURE UUID: 63b88857-baf0-4557-83c7-b6bddd65a470
ORCID for Christopher Harry Robert Goatley: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-2930-5591

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Date deposited: 04 Oct 2022 16:50
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 04:14

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Contributors

Author: Sterling B Tebbett
Author: Christopher Harry Robert Goatley ORCID iD
Author: David R Bellwood

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