150337 - Moray eels are more common on coral reefs subject to higher human.pdf (1.71 MB)
Download fileMoray eels are more common on coral reefs subject to higher human pressure in the greater Caribbean
journal contribution
posted on 2023-05-24, 11:50 authored by Clementi, GM, Bakker, J, Flowers, KI, Postaire, BD, Babcock, EA, Bond, ME, Buddo, D, Cardenosa, D, Currey-Randall, LM, Goetze, JS, Harvey, ES, Michelle HeupelMichelle Heupel, Kiszka, JJ, Kyne, F, MacNeil, MA, Meekan, MG, Rees, MJ, Simpfendorfer, CA, Speed, CW, Heithaus, MR, Chapman, DDProximity and size of the nearest market (‘market gravity’) have been shown to have strong negative effects on coral reef fish communities that can be mitigated by the establishment of closed areas. However, moray eels are functionally unique predators that are generally not subject to targeted fishing and should therefore not directly be affected by these factors. We used baited remote underwater video systems to investigate associations between morays and anthropogenic, habitat, and ecological factors in the Caribbean region. Market gravity had a positive effect on morays, while the opposite pattern was observed in a predator group subject to exploitation (sharks). Environmental DNA analyses corroborated the positive effect of market gravity on morays. We hypothesize that the observed pattern could be the indirect result of the depletion of moray competitors and predators near humans.
History
Publication title
iScienceVolume
24Article number
102097Number
102097Pagination
1-25ISSN
2589-0042Department/School
Integrated Marine Observing SystemPublisher
Cell PressPlace of publication
United StatesRights statement
Copyright 2021 The Author(s) Licensed under Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0) https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/Repository Status
- Open