Document of bibliographic reference 354774

BibliographicReference record

Type
Bibliographic resource
Type of document
Journal article
BibLvlCode
AS
Title
Habitat change and its consequences on reef fish specialization in biogeographic transition zones
Abstract
Aim

Reef fishes are commonly recognized as sentinels of the ongoing tropicalization in biogeographic transition zones between temperate and tropical areas. Despite the reliance of these marine ectotherms on the benthos, the importance of benthic habitat has rarely been considered as a factor constraining fish distribution. Therefore, our study aims at examining the consequences of both temperature and benthic variations on the fish fauna and diagnosing potential sentinels of these environmental changes.

Location

Taiwan, West Pacific.

Taxon

Teleostei (184 species).

Methods

We examined how the partitioning of habitats can influence the specialization of fish fauna along a latitudinal gradient. We diagnosed ‘specialist’ and ‘generalist’ fishes in this partitioning. For each specialist, we further evaluated whether its distribution is constrained by temperature, benthic habitat or both factors combined. The change in sea surface temperature over the last three decades was also monitored.

Results

Fish fauna showed the highest specialization when tropical and subtropical partitions of habitat were considered. Fifty-one tropical specialists, 7 subtropical specialists and 21 possible generalists were identified. Among specialists, 13 species were associated with temperature, 19 with habitat and 26 with both factors. Steady warming occurred across latitudes, but was accentuated in the winter of subtropical habitat.

Main Conclusions

Our results suggested that the distribution of some specialist fishes was constrained only by temperature while the distribution of some others also depended on the availability of benthic habitats. Consequently, under global warming, the distribution of some specialists might shift in a manner that follows the movement of isotherms, while the distribution of others might also be conditioned by the poleward shifts of benthos. A temporal mismatch between the emergence of suitable thermal environments and the arrival of some specialists may exist. Therefore, the tropicalization of high-latitude areas may be characterized by different waves of colonization.

WebOfScience code
https://www.webofscience.com/wos/woscc/full-record/WOS:000811893500001
Bibliographic citation
Lin, Y.V.; Hsiao, W.V.; Chen, W.-J.; Denis, V. (2022). Habitat change and its consequences on reef fish specialization in biogeographic transition zones. J. Biogeogr. 49(8): 1549-1561. https://dx.doi.org/10.1111/jbi.14450
Topic
Marine
Is peer reviewed
true

Authors

author
Name
Yuting Vicky Lin
author
Name
Wanchien Victoria Hsiao
author
Name
Wei-Jen Chen
author
Name
Vianney Denis

Links

referenced creativework
type
DOI
accessURL
https://dx.doi.org/10.1111/jbi.14450

Document metadata

date created
2022-08-09
date modified
2022-08-10