Category Ranking

98%

Total Visits

921

Avg Visit Duration

2 minutes

Citations

20

Article Abstract

Coral reef fisheries supply nutritious catch to tropical coastal communities, where the quality of reef seafood is determined by both the rate of biomass production and nutritional value of reef fishes. Yet our understanding of reef fisheries typically uses targets of total reef fish biomass rather than individual growth (i.e. biomass production) and nutrient content (i.e. nutritional value of reef fish), limiting the ability of management to sustain the productivity of nutritious catches. Here, we use modelled growth coefficients and nutrient concentrations to develop a new metric of nutrient productivity of coral reef fishes. We then evaluate this metric with underwater visual surveys of reef fish assemblages from four tropical countries to examine nutrient productivity of reef fish food webs. Species' growth coefficients were associated with nutrients that vary with body size (calcium, iron, selenium and zinc), but not total nutrient density. When integrated with fish abundance data, we find that herbivorous species typically dominate standing biomass, biomass turnover and nutrient production on coral reefs. Such bottom-heavy trophic distributions of nutrients were consistent across gradients of fishing pressure and benthic composition. We conclude that management restrictions that promote sustainability of herbivores and other low trophic-level species can sustain biomass and nutrient production from reef fisheries that is critical to the food security of over 500 million people in the tropics.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10547557PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2023.1601DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

reef fisheries
16
reef fish
16
nutrient production
12
coral reef
12
reef
11
nutrient
8
production coral
8
biomass production
8
nutritional reef
8
reef fishes
8

Similar Publications

Boat noise alters behaviour of two coral reef macroinvertebrates, Lambis lambis and Tridacna maxima.

Mar Pollut Bull

September 2025

Marine Science Program, Biological and Environmental Science and Engineering Division, King Abdullah University of Science and Technology (KAUST), Thuwal 23955-6900, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia.

Boat noise has been shown to distract and cause harm to many marine organisms. Most of the study effort has focused on fish & marine mammals, even though invertebrates represent over 92 % of all marine life. The few studies conducted on invertebrates have demonstrated clear negative effects of anthropogenic noise pollution.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The ongoing degradation of coral reef habitats is widely acknowledged to have adverse effects on the abundance and diversity of reef fish populations, yet the direct effects on ecosystem functions remain uncertain. This study used a quantitative approach to determine the mechanistic links between fish assemblages and ecological function. We investigated the effects of 3D habitat structure and coral morphology on the ecological, behavioral, and morphological functional traits of reef fish within a protected marine national park.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Environmental conditions play a key role in shaping the functional composition of communities by favouring species with specific trait combinations. Certain habitat characteristics likely select for traits that confer advantages under specific local conditions, highlighting the importance of functional traits in mediating species' responses to environmental variation and in structuring community assembly. The main objective of this study was to identify the relationship of functional and taxonomic diversity, and biological traits against environmental variables across a coastal gradient to offshore reefs.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Characterization and purification of lipovitellin-like egg yolk protein in a stony coral, Acropora aff. tenuis.

Comp Biochem Physiol B Biochem Mol Biol

August 2025

Yaeyama Field Station, Fisheries Technology Institute, Japan Fisheries Research and Education Agency, Ishigaki, Okinawa 907-0415, Japan.

Three egg proteins (EP1, EP2, and EP3) were detected in ovulated eggs of Acropora aff. tenuis, a reef-building stony coral found in tropical and subtropical areas. The proteins were separated into different fractions by gel filtration chromatography, and different patterns were observed by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) and Western blotting with antiserum against A.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Prolonged instability in blast-fished rubble beds impedes coral recovery.

Mar Environ Res

August 2025

Department of Marine Science and Technology, Faculty of Fisheries and Marine Science, IPB University, Bogor, Indonesia; School of Coral Reef Restoration (SCORES), Department of Marine Science and Technology, Faculty of Fisheries and Marine Science, IPB University, Bogor, Indonesia; General Organizat

Blast fishing has severely degraded Indonesia's coral reefs, reducing biodiversity and leaving rubble beds. In Bunaken National Park (BNP), it peaked in the 1970s and declined after the park's 1991 establishment, yet extensive rubble remains. Unstable rubble hinders coral recruitment and reef recovery.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF