Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-ndw9j Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-10T08:01:53.570Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Biogeography, Community Structure and Diversity of Red Sea and Western Indian Ocean Butterflyfishes

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 May 2009

David Righton
Affiliation:
Tropical Marine Research Unit, Department of Biology, University of York, York, YO1 5DD
Jeremy Kemp
Affiliation:
Tropical Marine Research Unit, Department of Biology, University of York, York, YO1 5DD
Rupert Ormond
Affiliation:
Tropical Marine Research Unit, Department of Biology, University of York, York, YO1 5DD

Extract

Patterns of variation in the assemblage structure of butterflyfishes (Chaetodontidae) of the Red Sea and western Indian Ocean have been compared. There is a lower number of species in the Red Sea, a high proportion of which are endemic to the region, both features that have been attributed to the relatively recent origin of the Red Sea. In the Red Sea overall mean abundance of butterflyfish is greatest in the central part, decreasing both to north and south. Several species present in the southern Red Sea are absent from the north. By contrast, most western Indian Ocean species are widely distributed within the Indo-West Pacific. Comparative field studies in the northern Red Sea (Egypt) and western Indian Ocean (Kenya) showed that mean number of species was higher in the western Indian Ocean, but mean density of butterflyfishes was higher in the Red Sea. In both areas diversity of butterflyfish was related to mean substrate diversity (the number of coral growth forms). Mean spatial niche breadth of butterflyfish species was much higher in the Red Sea than in the western Indian Ocean, whereas the extent of microhabitat use was higher in the western Indian Ocean. It is suggested that these differences may be related to the more recent evolution of the Red Sea fauna.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom 1996

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Barratt, L. & Medley, P., 1990. Managing multi-species ornamental reef fisheries. Progress in Underwater Science, 15, 5572.Google Scholar
Blum, S.D., 1989. Biogeography of the Chaetodontidae: an analysis of allopatry among closely related species. Environmental Biology of Fishes, 25, 931.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bouchon-Navaro, Y. & Bouchon, C., 1989. Correlations between chaetodontid fishes and coral communities of the Gulf of Aqaba (Red Sea). Environmental Biology of Fishes, 25, 4760.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Burgess, W.E., 1978. Butterflyfishes of the world. A monograph of the family Chaetodontidae. Neptune City: T.F.H. Publications.Google Scholar
Dor, M., 1984. Checklist of the fishes of the Red Sea. Jerusalem: The Israel Academy of Sciences and Humanities.Google Scholar
English, S., Wilkinson, C. & Baker, V., 1994. Survey manual for tropical marine resources. Townsville, Australia: ASEAN, [pp. 3440.]Google Scholar
Findley, J.S. & Findley, M.T., 1985. A search for pattern in butterflyfish communities. American Naturalist, 126, 800816.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Findley, J.S. & Findley, M.T., 1989. Circumtropical patterns in butterflyfish communities. Environmental Biology of Fishes, 25, 3346.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fowler, A.J., 1990. Spatial and temporal patterns of distribution and abundance of chaetodontid fishes at One Tree Reef, southern GBR. Marine Ecology Progress Series, 64, 3953.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fraser-B, Runner A., 1950. Holacanthus xanthotis, sp. n. and other chaetodont fishes from the Gulf of Aden. Proceedings of the Zoological Society of London, 120, 4348.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Klausewitz, W. & Fricke, H.W., 1985. On the occurrence of Chaetodon jayakari Norman in deep water of the Gulf of Aqaba, Red Sea (Pisces: Teleostei: Perciformes: Chaetodontidae). Senckenbergiana Maritima. Frankfurt-am-Main, 17, 113.Google Scholar
Klausewitz, H., 1989. Zoogeography of the ichthyofauna of the Red Sea. Fauna of Saudi Arabia, 10, 310346.Google Scholar
Luckhurst, B.E. & Luckhurst, K., 1978. Analysis of the influence of substrate variables on coral reef fish communities. Marine Biology, 49, 317323.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ormond, R.F.G., Dawson-Shepherd, A.R., Price, A.R.G. & Pitts, R.J., 1984. Report on the distribution of habitats and species in the Saudi Arabian Red Sea. Parts 1 & 2. Jeddah: Reports to Meteorology and Environmental Protection Administration.Google Scholar
Ormond, R.F.G. & Edwards, A., 1987. Red Sea fishes. In Red Sea (key environments) (ed. A.J., Edwards and S.M., Head), pp. 2244. Oxford: Pergamon Press.Google Scholar
Randall, J., 1983. Red Sea reef fishes. London: Immel Publishing.Google Scholar
Roberts, C.M., Dawson-Shepherd, A.R. & Ormond R.F.G., 1992. Large scale variation in assemblage structure of Red Sea butterflyfishes and angelfishes. Journal ofBiogeography, 19, 239250.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ross, S.T., 1986. Resource partitioning in fish assemblages: a review of field studies. Copeia, 1986, 352388.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Schoener, T.W., 1974. Resource partitioning in ecological communities. Science, New York, 185, 2739.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Winterbottom, R., 1985. Revision of the congrogadid Haliophis (Pisces: Perciformes), with the description of a new species from Indonesia, and comments on the endemic fish fauna of the northern Red Sea. Canadian Journal of Zoology, 63, 209217.CrossRefGoogle Scholar