Abstract

Successful recruitment of juvenile coral reef fishes may depend, in part, upon the aggressive behavior of adults already on the reef. In addition to initial levels of aggression, changes in aggressive behavior of adults, e.g., due to habituation, may have an even greater influence on recruiting juveniles. Adult males of the bicolor damselfish, Pomacentrus partitus, were used as subjects to study habituation of aggression toward conspecific and congeneric (P. variabilis) juveniles. Adults, held in a 1000 liter aquarium, habituated after 4 hours of constant exposure to juveniles restrained in a 1 liter ‘model bottle’. Stimulus strength of the juveniles depended on their species identity, size and proximity to the resident adult's shelter. There was a recovery of aggression with a change in stimulus location, but at the same location, a stimulus of greater strength was required to bring about recovery. The implications of these findings for coral reef fish community structure are discussed.

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