Marine Biology and Aquaculture Science, College of Science and Engineering, James Cook University, Townsville 4811, Australia
Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies, James Cook University, Townsville 4811, Australia.
Proc Biol Sci. 2018 Nov 7;285(1890):20181545. doi: 10.1098/rspb.2018.1545.
Escalating climate-related disturbances and asymmetric habitat losses will increasingly result in species living in more marginal habitats. Marginal habitats may represent important refuges if individuals can acquire adequate resources to survive and reproduce. However, resources at range margins are often distributed more sparsely; therefore, increased effort to acquire resources can result in suboptimal performance and lead to marginal populations becoming non-self-sustaining sink-populations. Shifting resource availability is likely to be particularly problematic for dietary specialists. Here, we use extensive behavioural observations and physiological condition measurements to examine the costs and benefits of resource-acquisition along a depth gradient in two obligate corallivore reef fishes with contrasting levels of dietary specialization. As expected, the space used to secure coral resources increased towards the lower depth margin. However, increased territory sizes resulted in equal or greater availability of resources within deeper territories. In addition, we observed decreased competition and no differences in foraging distance, pairing behaviour, body condition or fecundity at greater depths. Contrary to expectation, our results demonstrate that coral-obligate fishes can select high-quality coral patches on the deeper-reef to access equal or greater resources than their shallow-water counterparts, with no extra costs. This suggests depth offers a viable potential refuge for some at-risk coral-specialist fishes.
不断加剧的气候相关干扰和非对称生境丧失将导致越来越多的物种生活在更边缘的生境中。如果个体能够获得足够的资源来生存和繁殖,那么边缘生境可能代表着重要的避难所。然而,生境边缘的资源通常分布得更为稀疏;因此,为了获取资源而增加的努力可能会导致表现不佳,并导致边缘种群成为非自我维持的汇种群。资源供应的变化可能对食性特化的物种尤其成问题。在这里,我们使用广泛的行为观察和生理状况测量来研究两种具有不同食性特化程度的专性珊瑚食鱼在深度梯度上获取资源的成本和收益。正如预期的那样,用于获取珊瑚资源的空间会朝着较低的深度边缘增加。然而,更大的领地面积导致更深的领地内资源的同等或更大的可用性。此外,我们观察到在更深的海域,竞争减少,觅食距离、配对行为、身体状况或繁殖力没有差异。与预期相反,我们的结果表明,珊瑚专性鱼类可以选择深海珊瑚斑块来获取与浅水区同类鱼类相等或更多的资源,而不会产生额外的成本。这表明深度为一些处于危险中的珊瑚特化鱼类提供了一个可行的潜在避难所。