Abstract
Aggressive behaviour of the fishes Pomacentrus lividus Bl. Schn. and Acanthurus sohal Forskal from the Red Sea is briefly described, and its effect on intensity of algal grazing by herbivorous fish is demonstrated by settlement experiments. Green filamentous alga settles and grows at shallow depths over large areas of coral reefs, but is cropped by fishes to such an extent that it forms only a thin patchy matting on dead corals. Within pomacentrid territories, the alga forms a thicker matting on loosely cemented coralline rubble. Optimum depth range for growth occurs at less than 20 m. Rich growths of green filamentous alga, such as those which occur within pomacentrid territories or on settlement plates protected by wire netting cages, inhibit settlement of “lithothamnion” and invertebrates. While rasping and grazing fish feeders such as parrot fish and surgeon fish limit the distribution of certain invertebrates such as spirorbids, in shallow water it is also true that, were it not for such active removal of green filamentous alga, “lithothamnion” and many invertebrates would find ewer surfaces suitable for settlement.
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Communicated by J. H. S. Blaxter, Oban
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Vine, P.J. Effects of algal grazing and aggressive behaviour of the fishes Pomacentrus lividus and Acanthurus sohal on coral-reef ecology. Marine Biology 24, 131–136 (1974). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00389347
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00389347