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35 - The future for coral reef fishes

from PART V - DEBATES AND PARADIGM SHIFTS

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 May 2015

Peter F. Sale
Affiliation:
University of Windsor
Camilo Mora
Affiliation:
University of Hawaii, Manoa
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Summary

Complex, high diversity fish communities have assembled around coral reefs for 50 Ma, contributing to the complexity of this most elaborate of all marine ecosystems. These fish play important ecological roles in the reef ecosystem, serve as vital food resources for coastal populations, and provide one of the chief attractions offered by reefs to tourism. However, reef fish assemblages are now at some risk because of widespread overfishing and other human impacts on their environment. Our knowledge of the degree to which reef fish species are tied to reefs is limited, but studies of the aftermath of losses of coral due to mass bleaching reveal that many fish species are affected in diverse ways. Those that decline tend to be corallivores, or species which use live coral as shelter sites. Species using stimuli provided by corals to guide settlement following larval life may also be affected. Reef fish species may also be affected directly by warming and acidification caused by our greenhouse gas emissions. While the good news is that many reef fish species should be able to survive in a world with fewer coral reefs, the bad news is that the communities they will form seem certain to be diminished compared to those on reefs today. The irony, of course, is that we already understand the causes, and how to avoid or to remedy the consequences. We should be able to retain much of the abundance and diversity of fishes now occupying coral reefs. Yet our chronic past failure to address simple stressors like overfishing raises the wider question of what it will take to get us to redress the profound stresses we are now imposing on the biosphere which sustains our own lives.

The first attempts to review our ecological knowledge of coral reef fishes were papers by Ehrlich [744], Goldman and Talbot [947], and Sale [2226].

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2015

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