Settlement events and survivorship of six bar wrasse cohorts in the lagoons surrounding the island of Moorea, French Polynesia from 1996-1997 (CDD_in_Reef_Fish project)

Website: https://www.bco-dmo.org/dataset/727143
Data Type: Other Field Results
Version: 1
Version Date: 2017-10-05

Project
» Cryptic density dependence: the effects of spatial, ontogenetic, and individual variation in reef fish (CDD_in_Reef_Fish)
ContributorsAffiliationRole
Shima, JeffreyVictoria University of WellingtonPrincipal Investigator, Contact
Osenberg, CraigUniversity of Georgia (UGA)Co-Principal Investigator
Biddle, MathewWoods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI BCO-DMO)BCO-DMO Data Manager

Abstract
Settlement events and survivorship of six bar wrasse cohorts in the lagoons surrounding the island of Moorea, French Polynesia from 1996-1997. Fieldwork was conducted in the lagoons surrounding the island of Moorea, French Polynesia and focused on the six bar wrasse (Thalassoma hardwicke). Researchers made 480 observations of settlement events (i.e., pulses of settlement to individual sites) and monitored survivorship of six bar wrasse cohorts formed by these events.


Coverage

Spatial Extent: Lat:-17.5 Lon:-149.8333333
Temporal Extent: 1996-05 - 1997-06

Dataset Description

Spatio-temporal exploration of covariation among densities, environmental characteristics and strength of density-dependent mortality of reef fish, Thalassoma hardwicke.

Related Datasets:


Methods & Sampling

Fieldwork was conducted in the lagoons surrounding the island of Moorea, French Polynesia and focused on the six bar wrasse (Thalassoma hardwicke). Researchers made 480 observations of settlement events (i.e., pulses of settlement to individual sites) and monitored survivorship of six bar wrasse cohorts formed by these events. These were made during and after three periods of heavy settlement in May 1996, May 1997, and June 1997, using 192 patch reefs. Patch reefs were originally selected in two categories: (1) those with damselfish (Stegastes nigricans) territories composed primarily of algal turf (n  96 reefs, surveyed during all three settlement periods), or (2) those lacking damselfish territories and composed primarily of living coral (Porites lobata; n 96 reefs, surveyed during May and June of 1997 only). Other than this difference, all reefs were selected to be relatively similar in size, rugosity, and distance from nearest neighbors (described in Shima 2001).

Researchers censused reefs daily during periods of heavy settlement, and every third day during other times for densities of (1) settlers (and these cohorts were then followed through time), (2) older conspecifics, (3) heterospecific labrids and scarids, and (4) resident piscivores. Censuses were continued for 90 d following each settlement event. At the end of the study in each year, we recorded the densities and sizes (aerial coverage) of fine-branching corals (Pocillopora spp.) on each reef.


Data Processing Description

BCO-DMO Processing:

  • added conventional header with dataset name, PI name, version date
  • modified parameter names to conform with BCO-DMO naming conventions

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Data Files

File
ShimaOsenberg_2003.csv
(Comma Separated Values (.csv), 19.69 KB)
MD5:4edb4dea5d2fc3b71ccd055b674bcdac
Primary data file for dataset ID 727143

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Related Publications

Shima, J. S. (1999). Variability in relative importance of determinants of reef fish recruitment. Ecology Letters, 2(5), 304–310. doi:10.1046/j.1461-0248.1999.00089.x
Methods
Shima, J. S. (2001). Regulation of local populations of a coral reef fish via joint effects of density- and number-dependent mortality. Oecologia, 126(1), 58–65. doi:10.1007/s004420000486
General
Shima, J. S. 1999a. An evaluation of the processes that influence variability in abundance of a coral reef fish. Dissertation. University of California-Santa Barbara, California, USA.
General
Shima, J. S., & Osenberg, C. W. (2003). CRYPTIC DENSITY DEPENDENCE: EFFECTS OF COVARIATION BETWEEN DENSITY AND SITE QUALITY IN REEF FISH. Ecology, 84(1), 46–52. doi:10.1890/0012-9658(2003)084[0046:cddeoc]2.0.co;2 https://doi.org/10.1890/0012-9658(2003)084[0046:CDDEOC]2.0.CO;2
General

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Parameters

ParameterDescriptionUnits
OBS1

a numeric identifier of 480 observations of settlement; survivorship; and associated environmental data

unitless
REEF

Reef number identifier for 192 reefs in total (96 comprised mostly of Stegasted nigricans and 96 primarily composed of living coral; Porites lobata).

unitless
SITE

Site identifier (8 anchorages distributed across the north shore of Moorea). Specific site coordinates can be found in the data set Reef Locations at https://www.bco-dmo.org/dataset/645257.

unitless
PULSE

Settlement pulse identifier (i.e. periods of heavy settlement that occurred in May 1996=M96; May 1997=M97 or June 1997=J97)

unitless
HABITAT

primary substrate (D=damselfish Stegastes nigricans algal turf; C = living coral Porites lobata); the combination of 'Habitat' and 'Reef' give unique spatial identifiers

unitless
POC

Cumulative aerial coverage of living Pocillopora spp. corals on reef

square meters (m^2)
SETD

density of survivors of Thalassoma hardwicke from focal settlement cohort; 90d after end of settlement pulse

number per reef
RECD

cumulative density of new settlers of Thalassoma hardwicke appearing over 5 consecutive days centered around new moons

number of fish per meter square per reef
OLDER_TH

time-averaged density of older Thalassoma hardwicke

number of fish per meter square per reef
HETEROSP

time-averaged density of other small labrids and scarids resident on reef

number of fish per meter square per reef
PRED

time-averaged density of potential predators associated with reef

number of fish per meter square per reef


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Instruments

Dataset-specific Instrument Name
Dive Gear
Generic Instrument Name
Diving Mask and Snorkel
Dataset-specific Description
Dive Gear
Generic Instrument Description
A diving mask (also half mask, dive mask or scuba mask) is an item of diving equipment that allows underwater divers, including, scuba divers, free-divers, and snorkelers to see clearly underwater. Snorkel: A breathing apparatus for swimmers and surface divers that allows swimming or continuous use of a face mask without lifting the head to breathe, consisting of a tube that curves out of the mouth and extends above the surface of the water.


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Deployments

Osenberg_et_al_Moorea

Website
Platform
Osenberg et al Moorea
Start Date
2003-05-19
End Date
2015-07-12


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Project Information

Cryptic density dependence: the effects of spatial, ontogenetic, and individual variation in reef fish (CDD_in_Reef_Fish)

Coverage: Moorea, French Polynesia (-17.48, -149.82)


Description from NSF award abstract:
Ecologists have long been interested in the factors that drive spatial and temporal variability in population density and structure. In marine reef systems, attention has focused on the role of settlement-the transition of pelagic larvae to a benthic stage-and on density-dependent processes affecting recently settled juveniles. Recent data suggest that co-variance in settlement and subsequent density-dependent survival can obscure the patterns of density dependence at larger scales, a phenomenon called cryptic density dependence. This research will explore the mechanisms that underlie the spatial covariance of settlement and site quality - a process that has received little attention in the standard paradigm. These mechanistic studies of cryptic density dependence will facilitate the development of new frameworks for fish population dynamics that incorporate larval ecology, habitat quality, density dependence, life history, and the patterns and implications of spatial covariance among these factors. More generally, the work provides a specific empirical context, and a general theoretical treatment, of cryptic heterogeneity (hidden individual variation in demographic rates).

Note: Drs. Craig W. Osenberg and Ben Bolker were at the University of Florida at the time the NSF award was granted. Dr. Osenberg moved to the University of Georgia during the summer of 2014 (current contact information). Dr. Bolker moved to McMaster University in 2010 (current contact information).



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Funding

Funding SourceAward
NSF Division of Ocean Sciences (NSF OCE)

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