Abstract

Coral reefs are one of the most diverse marine ecosystems, providing numerous ecosystem services. This present study investigated the relationship between coral reef condition and the diversity and abundance of fishes, on a heavily fished East African coral reef at Gazi Bay, Kenya. Underwater visual censuses were conducted on thirty 50 × 5 m belt transects to assess the abundance and diversity of fishes. In parallel, a 25-m length of each of the same transects was recorded with photo-quadrats to assess coral community structure and benthic characteristics. For statistical analyses, multi-model inference based on the Akaike Information Criterion was used to evaluate the support for potential predictor variables of coral reef and fish diversity. We found that coral genus richness was negatively correlated with the abundance of macroalgae, whereas coral cover was positively correlated with both the abundance of herbivorous invertebrates (sea urchins) and with fish family richness. Similarly, fish family richness appeared mainly correlated with coral cover and invertebrate abundance, although no correlates of fish abundance could be identified. Coral and fish diversity were very low, but it appears that, contrary to some locations on the same coast, sea urchin abundance was not high enough to be having a negative influence on coral and fish assemblages. Due to increasing threats to coral reefs, it is important to understand the relationship among the components of the coral reef ecosystem on overfished reefs such as that at Gazi Bay.

Highlights

  • Coral reefs are one of the most diverse marine ecosystems, providing numerous ecosystem services to millions of inhabitants of tropical countries

  • The study was conducted on coral reefs at Gazi Bay, adjacent to Gazi Village (4◦ 260 S, E), a small fisher village located on the south coast of Kenya, about 45 km south of Mombasa [45] (Figure 1)

  • We found that on the reefs at Gazi Bay coral genus richness was negatively correlated with the abundance of macroalgae, whereas coral cover was positively correlated with the abundance of herbivorous invertebrates and with fish family richness

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Summary

Introduction

Coral reefs are one of the most diverse marine ecosystems, providing numerous ecosystem services to millions of inhabitants of tropical countries. More than 500 million people depend on coral reefs [1,2,3,4]. Together with functionally and ecologically linked mangrove habitats and seagrass meadows, coral reefs likely support the highest marine biodiversity in the world [5,6,7]. The complex reef system is mainly built by scleractinian corals which can only survive a narrow range of environmental variation, and are vulnerable to many kinds of disturbance [8]. Most of the world’s reefs are threatened by human activities [4,9,10,11], which have exacerbated a background of otherwise natural impacts, such as those caused by diseases, outbreaks of invasive species, storms, or sedimentation [10,12,13,14,15].

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