The effects of ocean acidification on habitat associations of coral reef fishes

The amount of carbon dioxide dissolved in the oceans is steadily rising due to a 40% increase in atmospheric CO₂ since the industrial revolution, leading to significant changes in water chemistry. Recent studies show that larval reef fish exposed to near future concentrations of CO₂ experience impai...

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Main Author: Devine, Brynn Michelle
Format: Thesis
Language:unknown
Published: 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:https://researchonline.jcu.edu.au/29786/1/29786_Devine_2011_thesis.pdf
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spelling ftjamescook:oai:researchonline.jcu.edu.au:29786 2023-09-05T13:22:17+02:00 The effects of ocean acidification on habitat associations of coral reef fishes Devine, Brynn Michelle 2011 application/pdf https://researchonline.jcu.edu.au/29786/1/29786_Devine_2011_thesis.pdf unknown https://doi.org/10.25903/kj3y-d829 https://researchonline.jcu.edu.au/29786/ https://researchonline.jcu.edu.au/29786/1/29786_Devine_2011_thesis.pdf Devine, Brynn Michelle (2011) The effects of ocean acidification on habitat associations of coral reef fishes. Masters (Research) thesis, James Cook University. open Thesis NonPeerReviewed 2011 ftjamescook https://doi.org/10.25903/kj3y-d829 2023-08-22T20:06:00Z The amount of carbon dioxide dissolved in the oceans is steadily rising due to a 40% increase in atmospheric CO₂ since the industrial revolution, leading to significant changes in water chemistry. Recent studies show that larval reef fish exposed to near future concentrations of CO₂ experience impaired ability to discriminate between olfactory cues and exhibit changes in behaviour that increase post-settlement mortality. Reef fishes at all life history stages rely on olfactory cues for critical behaviours including feeding, reproduction, predator avoidance, and the establishment and maintenance of habitat associations. However, it is unknown if olfactory impairment due to elevated CO₂ observed in larval fish will affect critical ecological processes, such as habitat selection at settlement, and if sensory disruption will also occur in adults. This thesis examines the effects that CO₂ concentrations predicted to occur in the ocean this century (550-950ppm) have on habitat associations of coral reef fishes. Fishes tested in each study were selected to assess behavioural responses to high-CO₂ conditions at both larval and adult stages and across multiple reef fish taxa, using species with varying degrees of habitat specialisation and habitat use. The chapters comprising this thesis address the following questions: 1) does olfactory impairment alter habitat selections and settlement behaviour of larval reef fishes when all sensory cues are available?; 2) does elevated CO₂ cause sensory impairment in adult fish, and if so how might olfactory-mediated processes such as homing behaviour be affected?; and 3) does elevated CO₂ affect habitat preferences of habitat specialist species? As larvae of many reef fish species settle to benthic substrates overnight and during new moon phases, when low light aids in predator avoidance, olfaction is potentially the key sensory system employed during the settlement process. The effect of elevated CO₂ on larval behaviour and habitat preferences was tested in three species of ... Thesis Ocean acidification James Cook University, Australia: ResearchOnline@JCU
institution Open Polar
collection James Cook University, Australia: ResearchOnline@JCU
op_collection_id ftjamescook
language unknown
description The amount of carbon dioxide dissolved in the oceans is steadily rising due to a 40% increase in atmospheric CO₂ since the industrial revolution, leading to significant changes in water chemistry. Recent studies show that larval reef fish exposed to near future concentrations of CO₂ experience impaired ability to discriminate between olfactory cues and exhibit changes in behaviour that increase post-settlement mortality. Reef fishes at all life history stages rely on olfactory cues for critical behaviours including feeding, reproduction, predator avoidance, and the establishment and maintenance of habitat associations. However, it is unknown if olfactory impairment due to elevated CO₂ observed in larval fish will affect critical ecological processes, such as habitat selection at settlement, and if sensory disruption will also occur in adults. This thesis examines the effects that CO₂ concentrations predicted to occur in the ocean this century (550-950ppm) have on habitat associations of coral reef fishes. Fishes tested in each study were selected to assess behavioural responses to high-CO₂ conditions at both larval and adult stages and across multiple reef fish taxa, using species with varying degrees of habitat specialisation and habitat use. The chapters comprising this thesis address the following questions: 1) does olfactory impairment alter habitat selections and settlement behaviour of larval reef fishes when all sensory cues are available?; 2) does elevated CO₂ cause sensory impairment in adult fish, and if so how might olfactory-mediated processes such as homing behaviour be affected?; and 3) does elevated CO₂ affect habitat preferences of habitat specialist species? As larvae of many reef fish species settle to benthic substrates overnight and during new moon phases, when low light aids in predator avoidance, olfaction is potentially the key sensory system employed during the settlement process. The effect of elevated CO₂ on larval behaviour and habitat preferences was tested in three species of ...
format Thesis
author Devine, Brynn Michelle
spellingShingle Devine, Brynn Michelle
The effects of ocean acidification on habitat associations of coral reef fishes
author_facet Devine, Brynn Michelle
author_sort Devine, Brynn Michelle
title The effects of ocean acidification on habitat associations of coral reef fishes
title_short The effects of ocean acidification on habitat associations of coral reef fishes
title_full The effects of ocean acidification on habitat associations of coral reef fishes
title_fullStr The effects of ocean acidification on habitat associations of coral reef fishes
title_full_unstemmed The effects of ocean acidification on habitat associations of coral reef fishes
title_sort effects of ocean acidification on habitat associations of coral reef fishes
publishDate 2011
url https://researchonline.jcu.edu.au/29786/1/29786_Devine_2011_thesis.pdf
genre Ocean acidification
genre_facet Ocean acidification
op_relation https://doi.org/10.25903/kj3y-d829
https://researchonline.jcu.edu.au/29786/
https://researchonline.jcu.edu.au/29786/1/29786_Devine_2011_thesis.pdf
Devine, Brynn Michelle (2011) The effects of ocean acidification on habitat associations of coral reef fishes. Masters (Research) thesis, James Cook University.
op_rights open
op_doi https://doi.org/10.25903/kj3y-d829
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