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Advisor(s)
Abstract(s)
The complexity and diversity of physical and biotic
habitats are important features influencing the composition of
shallow water reef fish assemblages, especially in temperate
regions where abundant and diverse algal cover may have an
important habitat-forming role. Coastal fish have adapted to
these diverse habitats and to the temporal and spatial variations
of algal assemblages in different ways. Wrasses are an
important group of coastal rocky reef fish which present particular
associations to algae in temperate systems. In this
study, habitat associations were analysed in three species of
wrasses: Symphodus bailloni, Symphodus melops and
Symphodus roissali, and their behaviour was recorded. Eight
main behavioural categories (comprising a total of 42 different
behaviours) were identified: exploring, foraging, resting, agonistic
interactions, cleaning, courtship, reproduction and
nesting. S. melops occurred on shallower depths and was frequently
involved in both intra- and interspecific agonistic interactions
with the other wrasse species, although rarely with
S. bailloni. S. roissali was associated with microhabitats of
smaller size where it frequently hides. Feeding occurred
mostly on bedrock habitat when compared to other microhabitats.
Foraging and resting showed a marked seasonality
in the three wrasses, related to shifts in biotic habitat
structure and to changes in the behavioural repertoire during
the breeding season.
Description
Keywords
Wrasses Behaviour Habitat Rocky reefs Algal cover Symphodusspp
Citation
Acta Ethologica, 18, 269-282. doi: 10.1007/s10211-015-0212-1
Publisher
Springer