1986
DOI: 10.2307/2937073
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The Role of Herbivorous Fishes in the Organization of a Caribbean Reef Community

Abstract: Experimental manipulations of grazing intensity were used to examine the role of herbivorous fishes in the families Acanthuridae (surgeonfishes) and Scaridae (parrotfishes) in determining distributions and abundances of benthic species within and among shallow tropical reef habitats. A back reef habitat along the Belizean barrier reef was characterized by a diverse benthic assemblage of algal turfs, coralline algae, and the coral Porites astreoides, but by extremely low macroalgal abundance. In contrast, sever… Show more

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Cited by 410 publications
(456 citation statements)
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“…Macroalgae were not able to overgrow corals until the last major herbivore was lost from the system. Lapointe suggested that nutrient enrichment might have tipped the competitive balance of macroalgae over corals (51), but this seems unlikely (40,52,53).…”
Section: Caribbean Coral Reefsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Macroalgae were not able to overgrow corals until the last major herbivore was lost from the system. Lapointe suggested that nutrient enrichment might have tipped the competitive balance of macroalgae over corals (51), but this seems unlikely (40,52,53).…”
Section: Caribbean Coral Reefsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Herbivory on some coral reefs is probably more intense than in any other habitat, either terrestrial or marine (Hatcher & Larkum 1983, Carpenter 1986, Lewis 1986, Choat 1991. On reefs subject to minimal human disturbance, fish, as the main consumers of the primary production, are often estimated to consume between 50 and 100% of total algal production (Carpenter 1986).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Structure, species diversity and biomass of algal communities are known to be controlled by herbivorous organisms (Ogden & Lobel, 1978;Hay et al, 1983;Lewis and Wainwright, 1985;Lewis, 1986) and reduction of grazing by herbivores is known to unbalance the community (McCook, 1999-1984, in the Caribbean, immediately following the mass mortality of Diadema antillarum, algal biomass increased on reefs where the sea urchin was dominant. The scientists who witnessed the die-off throughout the Caribbean have provided a data-rich literature on the immediate and longer-term response of algae (Lessios, 1988, review).…”
Section: Species Richnessmentioning
confidence: 99%