Abstract

Short-term temporal patterns of recruitment have been described in a variety of coral reef fishes and have often been related with lunar and tidal cycles. While the relative importance of lunar and tidal factors in determining recruitment patterns has been difficult to assess, most studies have been done in the Caribbean and Indo-Pacific, where tidal amplitudes are small. We studied the short-term temporal dynamics of fish recruitment at Gorgona Island (tropical eastern Pacific), where there is a large tidal amplitude (~4.4 m). Every other day during three consecutive months in 1998, we directly measured the magnitude of reef fish recruitment to standardized coral units (SCUs) isolated from natural reefs. A total of 40 species from 21 families settled on the SCUs. Of 11 species with sufficient numbers for meaningful statistical analyses, two (Lutjanus guttatus and Pomacanthus zonipectus) had lunar recruitment with peaks near the new moon; three combined species of antennariids showed semilunar recruitment with peaks near moon quarters; and eight other species showed sporadic and aperiodic recruitment pulses. The contribution of lunar (moonlight intensity) and tidal factors (tidal amplitude and net tidal flow) to recruitment dynamics varied among species, although it was generally low (<18%) even among species with periodic patterns, except perhaps in L. guttatus. In this species, recruitment magnitude correlated negatively with moonlight intensity, accounting for 34.5% of the variance. Post-settlement predation by roving predators may be one cause of this relationship. In the remaining species, particularly those with sporadic and aperiodic recruitment pulses, stochastically varying weather and oceanographic events may be more important in determining temporal variation in recruitment.

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