Functional ecology of fish on coral reefs: the roles of seascape and subsistence fishing

Globally, fish are being removed from our oceans at unsustainable rates. This is particularly true for coral reef fish, which, in addition to overfishing, are also under threat from global warming, ocean acidification, and pollution. Current conservation strategies for coral reef fisheries either in...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Martin, Tyson
Other Authors: Connolly, Roderick, Olds, Andrew
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:English
Published: Griffith University 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10072/371967
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spelling ftgriffithuniv:oai:research-repository.griffith.edu.au:10072/371967 2023-05-15T17:52:10+02:00 Functional ecology of fish on coral reefs: the roles of seascape and subsistence fishing Martin, Tyson Connolly, Roderick Olds, Andrew 2017-10 application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/10072/371967 English en eng Griffith University The author owns the copyright in this thesis, unless stated otherwise. Functional ecology of fish Coral reefs Seascape fishing Subsistence fishing Griffith thesis 2017 ftgriffithuniv 2018-07-30T11:04:16Z Globally, fish are being removed from our oceans at unsustainable rates. This is particularly true for coral reef fish, which, in addition to overfishing, are also under threat from global warming, ocean acidification, and pollution. Current conservation strategies for coral reef fisheries either indirectly control the amount of fish caught through restrictions on fishing effort, techniques, and areas, or directly limit fish catch using quotas for each fishery. However, to ensure that these conservation strategies function to their utmost potential, we need to identify the fishing techniques and seascape characteristics that have the most impact on coral reefs and their associated fish assemblages. This thesis used a field study on a group of remote Pacific atolls to establish how fishing using traditional techniques for food, not profit (subsistence fishing) affected coral reef fish assemblages. I demonstrate that subsistence fishing may be an effective way of providing food for small island communities, while also maintaining pristine reef fish assemblages. This thesis also investigated how connections in coastal seascapes affected crucial ecosystem functions on coral reefs. I show that connectivity can exert opposing effects on ecosystem functions, and that the distribution of fish and the ecosystem functions they provide may not align. I advocate that if marine spatial plans aim to incorporate ecosystem functions into their framework, they need to explicitly measure ecosystem function, rather than using proxies such as fish abundance. Finally, this thesis reports how the arrangement of mangroves and coral reefs in coastal seascapes varied globally, and how these differences affected the distribution of fish. I show that the configuration of coastal mangrove and coral reef seascapes, and their effects on fish, are correlated with tidal range, and I suggest that we cannot make global generalisations about the scale at which mangrove connections modify fish assemblages on coral reefs. This thesis makes direct recommendations on how to improve the conservation of coral reef fish. By endorsing low-impact fishing techniques and improving our understanding of seascape ecology, we can expect to improve conservation strategies for coral reefs, making them as practical and effective as possible. Thesis (PhD Doctorate) Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) Griffith School of Environment Science, Environment, Engineering and Technology Full Text Other/Unknown Material Ocean acidification Griffith University: Griffith Research Online Pacific Griffith ENVELOPE(-155.500,-155.500,-85.883,-85.883)
institution Open Polar
collection Griffith University: Griffith Research Online
op_collection_id ftgriffithuniv
language English
topic Functional ecology of fish
Coral reefs
Seascape fishing
Subsistence fishing
spellingShingle Functional ecology of fish
Coral reefs
Seascape fishing
Subsistence fishing
Martin, Tyson
Functional ecology of fish on coral reefs: the roles of seascape and subsistence fishing
topic_facet Functional ecology of fish
Coral reefs
Seascape fishing
Subsistence fishing
description Globally, fish are being removed from our oceans at unsustainable rates. This is particularly true for coral reef fish, which, in addition to overfishing, are also under threat from global warming, ocean acidification, and pollution. Current conservation strategies for coral reef fisheries either indirectly control the amount of fish caught through restrictions on fishing effort, techniques, and areas, or directly limit fish catch using quotas for each fishery. However, to ensure that these conservation strategies function to their utmost potential, we need to identify the fishing techniques and seascape characteristics that have the most impact on coral reefs and their associated fish assemblages. This thesis used a field study on a group of remote Pacific atolls to establish how fishing using traditional techniques for food, not profit (subsistence fishing) affected coral reef fish assemblages. I demonstrate that subsistence fishing may be an effective way of providing food for small island communities, while also maintaining pristine reef fish assemblages. This thesis also investigated how connections in coastal seascapes affected crucial ecosystem functions on coral reefs. I show that connectivity can exert opposing effects on ecosystem functions, and that the distribution of fish and the ecosystem functions they provide may not align. I advocate that if marine spatial plans aim to incorporate ecosystem functions into their framework, they need to explicitly measure ecosystem function, rather than using proxies such as fish abundance. Finally, this thesis reports how the arrangement of mangroves and coral reefs in coastal seascapes varied globally, and how these differences affected the distribution of fish. I show that the configuration of coastal mangrove and coral reef seascapes, and their effects on fish, are correlated with tidal range, and I suggest that we cannot make global generalisations about the scale at which mangrove connections modify fish assemblages on coral reefs. This thesis makes direct recommendations on how to improve the conservation of coral reef fish. By endorsing low-impact fishing techniques and improving our understanding of seascape ecology, we can expect to improve conservation strategies for coral reefs, making them as practical and effective as possible. Thesis (PhD Doctorate) Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) Griffith School of Environment Science, Environment, Engineering and Technology Full Text
author2 Connolly, Roderick
Olds, Andrew
format Other/Unknown Material
author Martin, Tyson
author_facet Martin, Tyson
author_sort Martin, Tyson
title Functional ecology of fish on coral reefs: the roles of seascape and subsistence fishing
title_short Functional ecology of fish on coral reefs: the roles of seascape and subsistence fishing
title_full Functional ecology of fish on coral reefs: the roles of seascape and subsistence fishing
title_fullStr Functional ecology of fish on coral reefs: the roles of seascape and subsistence fishing
title_full_unstemmed Functional ecology of fish on coral reefs: the roles of seascape and subsistence fishing
title_sort functional ecology of fish on coral reefs: the roles of seascape and subsistence fishing
publisher Griffith University
publishDate 2017
url http://hdl.handle.net/10072/371967
long_lat ENVELOPE(-155.500,-155.500,-85.883,-85.883)
geographic Pacific
Griffith
geographic_facet Pacific
Griffith
genre Ocean acidification
genre_facet Ocean acidification
op_rights The author owns the copyright in this thesis, unless stated otherwise.
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