Fish community reassembly after a coral mass mortality: Higher trophic groups are subject to increased rates of extinction

David Alonso*, Aleix Pinyol-Gallemi, Teresa Alcoverro, Rohan Arthur

*Corresponding author for this work

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

    27 Citations (Scopus)
    127 Downloads (Pure)

    Abstract

    Since Gleason and Clements, our understanding of community dynamics has been influenced by theories emphasising either dispersal or niche assembly as central to community structuring. Determining the relative importance of these processes in structuring real-world communities remains a challenge. We tracked reef fish community reassembly after a catastrophic coral mortality in a relatively unfished archipelago. We revisited the stochastic model underlying MacArthur and Wilson's Island Biogeography Theory, with a simple extension to account for trophic identity. Colonisation and extinction rates calculated from decadal presence-absence data based on (1) species neutrality, (2) trophic identity and (3) site-specificity were used to model post-disturbance reassembly, and compared with empirical observations. Results indicate that species neutrality holds within trophic guilds, and trophic identity significantly increases overall model performance. Strikingly, extinction rates increased clearly with trophic position, indicating that fish communities may be inherently susceptible to trophic downgrading even without targeted fishing of top predators.

    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)451-461
    Number of pages11
    JournalEcology Letters
    Volume18
    Issue number5
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - May-2015

    Keywords

    • Coral reef fish communities
    • dispersal community assembly
    • MacArthur and Wilson island biogeography
    • niche community assembly
    • post-disturbance community reassembly
    • stochastic extinction-colonisation models
    • trophic island biogeography
    • EXPERIMENTAL ZOOGEOGRAPHY
    • CLIMATE-CHANGE
    • BLEACHING EVENT
    • PHASE-SHIFTS
    • REEFS
    • ISLANDS
    • COLONIZATION
    • RESILIENCE
    • NEUTRALITY
    • FACILITATION

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