Coral reef fishes The most species-rich vertebrate communities known.

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Coral reef fishes The most species-rich vertebrate communities known

Transcript of Coral reef fishes The most species-rich vertebrate communities known.

Page 1: Coral reef fishes The most species-rich vertebrate communities known.

Coral reef fishes

The most species-rich vertebrate communities known

Page 2: Coral reef fishes The most species-rich vertebrate communities known.

Seven important families of coral reef fish

• Gobiidae

• Serranidae

• Labridae

• Chaetodontidae

• Zanclidae

• Acanthuridae

• Tetraodontidae

Page 3: Coral reef fishes The most species-rich vertebrate communities known.

4000-4500 species worldwide, comprising 25% of the known

species of marine fish

Page 4: Coral reef fishes The most species-rich vertebrate communities known.

Latitudinal gradient in species richness holds for all marine fishes • Possibly a result of the high number of

coral reef fishes, which are found only in the tropics

Page 5: Coral reef fishes The most species-rich vertebrate communities known.

However, do coral reef fishes show such a gradient within the tropical and subtropical

regions?• Not clearly, and their species richness is

not clearly linked with reef area, which does show a gradient within the tropical and subtropical regions (more reef area at the equator)

Page 6: Coral reef fishes The most species-rich vertebrate communities known.

Longitudinal patterns of coral reef fish species richness

• Most species-rich areas are in the western Pacific, which also has the highest richness of coral species

• Investigators have assumed that this is the center of origin of the group

Page 7: Coral reef fishes The most species-rich vertebrate communities known.

Also, a general pattern of less species richness in the Atlantic

as compared to the Pacific exists

Page 8: Coral reef fishes The most species-rich vertebrate communities known.

The relationship between reef area and fish diversity longitudinally is clearly

demonstrated

Page 9: Coral reef fishes The most species-rich vertebrate communities known.

The high species richness in the western Pacific could be because of

• Sea-level changes during the period 5-2 mya, resulting in basins of water being isolated, where allopatric speciation of fishes could then take place

• High endemism levels in western Pacific support this idea, although high endemism is also found in Arabian Sea, Hawaii, and the Red Sea

Page 10: Coral reef fishes The most species-rich vertebrate communities known.

Low species richness of eastern Pacific may be because of

• Westward-flowing currents

• Lack of stepping stones across the Pacific

Page 11: Coral reef fishes The most species-rich vertebrate communities known.

Lower species richness of Atlantic compared to Pacific may be because of

• Lack of suitable refuges during times of environmental stress leading to

• Generalist species and

• Lack of specialists

• Ex. Parrotfish

Page 12: Coral reef fishes The most species-rich vertebrate communities known.

Take-home message

• Reef area and current patterns explain some, but not all, patterns in coral reef fish species richness

Page 13: Coral reef fishes The most species-rich vertebrate communities known.

Expedition to coral triangle identifies many new species