logo
Loading...
Human proximity suppresses fish recruitment by altering mangrove-associated odour cues
Environmental Studies and ForestryScientific Reports

Human proximity suppresses fish recruitment by altering mangrove-associated odour cues

R. M. Brooker, A. L. Seyfferth, et al.

This research conducted by Rohan M. Brooker and colleagues reveals how human activities are reshaping coastal marine environments by altering the sensory cues that are crucial for fish recruitment. Discover how mangrove leaves from human-affected areas are less attractive to juvenile fish and the implications for coastal biodiversity.... show more
Abstract
Human-driven threats to coastal marine communities could potentially affect chemically mediated behaviours that have evolved to facilitate crucial ecological processes. Chemical cues and their importance remain inadequately understood in marine systems, but cues from coastal vegetation can provide sensory information guiding aquatic animals to key resources or habitats. In the tropics, mangroves are a ubiquitous component of healthy coastal ecosystems, associated with a range of habitats from river mouths to coral reefs. Because mangrove leaf litter is a predictable cue to coastal habitats, chemical information from mangrove leaves could provide a source of settlement cues for coastal fishes, drawing larvae towards shallow benthic habitats or inducing settlement. In choice assays, juvenile fishes from the Caribbean (Belize) and Indo-Pacific (Fiji) were attracted to cues from mangroves leaves and were more attracted to cues from mangroves distant from human settlement. In the field, experimental reefs supplemented with mangrove leaves grown away from humans attracted more fish recruits from a greater diversity of species than reefs supplemented with leaves grown near humans. Together, this suggests that human use of coastal areas alters natural chemical cues, negatively affecting the behavioural responses of larval fishes and potentially suppressing recruitment. Overall, our findings highlight the critical links that exist between marine and terrestrial habitats, and the importance of considering these in the broader conservation and management of coastal ecosystems.
Publisher
Scientific Reports
Published On
Dec 03, 2020
Authors
Rohan M. Brooker, Angelia L. Seyfferth, Alesia Hunter, Jennifer M. Sneed, Danielle L. Dixson, Mark E. Hays
Tags
coastal marine communitieshuman impactmangrove leavesfish larvaechemical cuesfish recruitmentecological processes
Listen, Learn & Level Up
Over 10,000 hours of research content in 25+ fields, available in 22+ languages.
No more digging through PDFs, just hit play and absorb the world's latest research in your language, on your time.
listen to research audio papers with researchbunny