TY - JOUR
T1 - The shape of success in a turbulent world
T2 - wave exposure filtering of coral reef herbivory
AU - Bejarano, Sonia
AU - Jouffray, Jean Baptiste
AU - Chollett, Iliana
AU - Allen, Robert
AU - Roff, George
AU - Marshell, Alyssa
AU - Steneck, Robert
AU - Ferse, Sebastian C.A.
AU - Mumby, Peter J.
N1 - Funding Information:
Fieldwork of this project was provided by the ARC Laureate Fellowship to P.J.M. which supported S.B., G.R., A.M. and R.S. S.B. and S.C.A.F. were later supported by a grant from the German Ministry for Research and Education (BMBF, grant no. 01LN1303A). J.-B.J. was funded by the Erling-Persson Family Foundation and the Swedish Research Council Formas (Project number 2015-743). Authors wish to express their sincere gratitude to Yimnang Golbuu and the staff of the Palau Coral Reef Institute for their support during fieldwork, Tebaua Sapolu, Eylem Elma, and Kate Fraser for their assistance during early stages of video analysis, and two anonymous reviewers for their thoroughness and constructive criticism.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2017 The Authors. Functional Ecology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of British Ecological Society.
PY - 2017/6
Y1 - 2017/6
N2 - While environmental filters are well-known factors influencing community assembly, the extent to which these modify species functions, and entire ecosystem processes, is poorly understood. Focusing on a high-diversity system, we ask whether environmental filtering has ecosystem-wide effects beyond community assembly. We characterise a coral reef herbivorous fish community for swimming performance based on ten functional traits derived from fish morphology. We then investigate whether wave exposure modifies the functional make-up of herbivory, and the absolute and relative feeding frequency of distinct feeding functional groups. Herbivorous fish species conformed to either laterally compressed or fusiform body plans, which differ in their morphological design to minimise drag. High wave exposure selectively limited the feeding function of the deepest body shapes with highest caudal thrust efficiency, and favoured fusiform bodies irrespective of pectoral fin shape. Traditionally recognised herbivore feeding functional groups (i.e. grazers–detritivores and scrapers–small excavators) differed in swimming performance, and in their capacity to feed consistently across levels of wave exposure. We therefore emphasise the distinctness of their ecological niche and functional complementarity. Species within the same feeding functional group also had contrasting responses to wave exposure. We thereby reveal a further ecological dimension of niche partitioning, and reiterate the risk of assuming functional redundancy among species with a common feeding mode. Contrasting responses of species within feeding functional roles (i.e. response diversity) allowed the preservation of critical trophic functions throughout the gradient (e.g. macroalgal browsing), and likely explained why overall levels of herbivory were robust to filtering. Whether ecosystem functioning will remain robust under the additive effects of environmental stress and human-induced disturbances remains to be tested. A lay summary is available for this article.
AB - While environmental filters are well-known factors influencing community assembly, the extent to which these modify species functions, and entire ecosystem processes, is poorly understood. Focusing on a high-diversity system, we ask whether environmental filtering has ecosystem-wide effects beyond community assembly. We characterise a coral reef herbivorous fish community for swimming performance based on ten functional traits derived from fish morphology. We then investigate whether wave exposure modifies the functional make-up of herbivory, and the absolute and relative feeding frequency of distinct feeding functional groups. Herbivorous fish species conformed to either laterally compressed or fusiform body plans, which differ in their morphological design to minimise drag. High wave exposure selectively limited the feeding function of the deepest body shapes with highest caudal thrust efficiency, and favoured fusiform bodies irrespective of pectoral fin shape. Traditionally recognised herbivore feeding functional groups (i.e. grazers–detritivores and scrapers–small excavators) differed in swimming performance, and in their capacity to feed consistently across levels of wave exposure. We therefore emphasise the distinctness of their ecological niche and functional complementarity. Species within the same feeding functional group also had contrasting responses to wave exposure. We thereby reveal a further ecological dimension of niche partitioning, and reiterate the risk of assuming functional redundancy among species with a common feeding mode. Contrasting responses of species within feeding functional roles (i.e. response diversity) allowed the preservation of critical trophic functions throughout the gradient (e.g. macroalgal browsing), and likely explained why overall levels of herbivory were robust to filtering. Whether ecosystem functioning will remain robust under the additive effects of environmental stress and human-induced disturbances remains to be tested. A lay summary is available for this article.
KW - environmental filtering
KW - feeding frequency
KW - functional traits
KW - herbivorous fish
KW - species niches
KW - swimming performance
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85013660098&partnerID=8YFLogxK
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/citedby.url?scp=85013660098&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1111/1365-2435.12828
DO - 10.1111/1365-2435.12828
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85013660098
SN - 0269-8463
VL - 31
SP - 1312
EP - 1324
JO - Functional Ecology
JF - Functional Ecology
IS - 6
ER -