Abstract

Warming waters and changing ocean currents are increasing the supply of tropical fish larvae to temperature regions where they are exposed to novel habitats, namely temperate macroalgae and barren reefs. Here, we use underwater surveys on the temperate reefs of south-eastern (SE) Australia and western Japan (~33.5°N and S, respectively) to investigate how temperate macroalgal and non-macroalgal habitats influence recruitment success of a range of tropical fishes. We show that temperate macroalgae strongly affected recruitment of many tropical fish species in both regions and across three recruitment seasons in SE Australia. Densities and richness of recruiting tropical fishes, primarily planktivores and herbivores, were over seven times greater in non-macroalgal than macroalgal reef habitat. Species and trophic diversity (K-dominance) were also greater in non-macroalgal habitat. Temperate macroalgal cover was a stronger predictor of tropical fish assemblages than temperate fish assemblages, reef rugosities or wave exposure. Tropical fish richness, diversity and density were greater on barren reef than on reef dominated by turfing algae. One common species, the neon damselfish (Pomacentrus coelestis), chose non-macroalgal habitat over temperate macroalgae for settlement in an aquarium experiment. This study highlights that temperate macroalgae may partly account for spatial variation in recruitment success of many tropical fishes into higher latitudes. Hence, habitat composition of temperate reefs may need to be considered to accurately predict the geographic responses of many tropical fishes to climate change.

Highlights

  • Ocean warming is leading to rapid and widespread poleward shifts in the geographic distribution of many marine species (Thomas et al 2004; Harley et al 2006)

  • We examined the influence of temperate macroalgal cover on recruitment of tropical reef fishes by comparing the density, richness and diversity of new recruit and juvenile tropical fishes between macroalgal habitat and non-macroalgal habitats

  • The ability of tropical reef fishes to shift poleward with ocean warming may be strongly dependant on the availability of suitable reef habitats at temperate latitudes (Feary et al 2014)

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Summary

Introduction

Ocean warming is leading to rapid and widespread poleward shifts in the geographic distribution of many marine species (Thomas et al 2004; Harley et al 2006). This climate-driven redistribution of marine organisms is altering the composition and food web structure of coastal ecosystems. Such climate-driven ecological changes often negatively affect human societies that depend on coastal ecosystems for resources and economic stability (Cheung et al 2009; Pereira et al 2010). For reef-associated organisms, Coral Reefs availability of suitable reef habitats may determine whether they colonise higher latitudes (e.g. Hill et al 2001; Warren et al 2001; Honnay et al 2002; Travis 2003; Cheung et al 2010; Mair et al 2014)

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