Regional reef fish assemblage maps provide baseline biogeography for tropicalization monitoring

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Regional reef fish assemblage maps provide baseline biogeography for tropicalization monitoring. / Walker, Brian; Becker, Dana; Williams, Gareth J. et al.
In: Scientific Reports, Vol. 14, No. 1, 7893, 03.04.2024, p. 7893.

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

HarvardHarvard

Walker, B, Becker, D, Williams, GJ, Kilfoyle, A, Smith, S & Kozachuk, A 2024, 'Regional reef fish assemblage maps provide baseline biogeography for tropicalization monitoring', Scientific Reports, vol. 14, no. 1, 7893, pp. 7893. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-024-58185-6

APA

Walker, B., Becker, D., Williams, G. J., Kilfoyle, A., Smith, S., & Kozachuk, A. (2024). Regional reef fish assemblage maps provide baseline biogeography for tropicalization monitoring. Scientific Reports, 14(1), 7893. Article 7893. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-024-58185-6

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MLA

VancouverVancouver

Walker B, Becker D, Williams GJ, Kilfoyle A, Smith S, Kozachuk A. Regional reef fish assemblage maps provide baseline biogeography for tropicalization monitoring. Scientific Reports. 2024 Apr 3;14(1):7893. 7893. Epub 2024 Apr 3. doi: 10.1038/s41598-024-58185-6

Author

Walker, Brian ; Becker, Dana ; Williams, Gareth J. et al. / Regional reef fish assemblage maps provide baseline biogeography for tropicalization monitoring. In: Scientific Reports. 2024 ; Vol. 14, No. 1. pp. 7893.

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Regional reef fish assemblage maps provide baseline biogeography for tropicalization monitoring

AU - Walker, Brian

AU - Becker, Dana

AU - Williams, Gareth J.

AU - Kilfoyle, Audie

AU - Smith, Steven

AU - Kozachuk, Allie

N1 - © 2024. The Author(s).

PY - 2024/4/3

Y1 - 2024/4/3

N2 - The Anthropocene rise in global temperatures is facilitating the expansion of tropical species into historically non-native subtropical locales, including coral reef fish. This redistribution of species, known as tropicalization, has serious consequences for economic development, livelihoods, food security, human health, and culture. Measuring the tropicalization of subtropical reef fish assemblages is difficult due to expansive species ranges, temporal distribution shifts with the movement of isotherms, and many dynamic density-dependent factors affecting occurrence and density. Therefore, in locales where tropical and subtropical species co-occur, detecting tropicalization changes relies on regional analyses of the relative densities and occurrence of species. This study provides a baseline for monitoring reef fish tropicalization by utilizing extensive monitoring data from a pivotal location in southeast Florida along a known transition between tropical and subtropical ecotones to define regional reef fish assemblages and use benthic habitat maps to spatially represent their zoogeography. Assemblages varied significantly by ecoregion, habitat depth, habitat type, and topographic relief. Generally, the southern assemblages had higher occurrences and densities of tropical species, whereas the northern assemblages had a higher occurrence and density of subtropical species. A total of 108 species were exclusive to regions south of the Bahamas Fracture Zone (BFZ) (South Palm Beach, Deerfield, Broward-Miami) and 35 were exclusive to the north (North Palm Beach, Martin), supporting the BFZ as a pivotal location that affects the coastal biogeographic extent of tropical marine species in eastern North America. Future tropicalization of reef fish assemblages are expected to be evident in temporal deviance of percent occurrence and/or relative species densities between baseline assemblages, where the poleward expansion of tropical species is expected to show the homogenization of assemblage regions as adjacent regions become more similar or the regional boundaries expand poleward. Ecoregions, habitat depth, habitat type, and relief should be incorporated into the stratification and analyses of reef fish surveys to statistically determine assemblage differences across the seascape, including those from tropicalization. [Abstract copyright: © 2024. The Author(s).]

AB - The Anthropocene rise in global temperatures is facilitating the expansion of tropical species into historically non-native subtropical locales, including coral reef fish. This redistribution of species, known as tropicalization, has serious consequences for economic development, livelihoods, food security, human health, and culture. Measuring the tropicalization of subtropical reef fish assemblages is difficult due to expansive species ranges, temporal distribution shifts with the movement of isotherms, and many dynamic density-dependent factors affecting occurrence and density. Therefore, in locales where tropical and subtropical species co-occur, detecting tropicalization changes relies on regional analyses of the relative densities and occurrence of species. This study provides a baseline for monitoring reef fish tropicalization by utilizing extensive monitoring data from a pivotal location in southeast Florida along a known transition between tropical and subtropical ecotones to define regional reef fish assemblages and use benthic habitat maps to spatially represent their zoogeography. Assemblages varied significantly by ecoregion, habitat depth, habitat type, and topographic relief. Generally, the southern assemblages had higher occurrences and densities of tropical species, whereas the northern assemblages had a higher occurrence and density of subtropical species. A total of 108 species were exclusive to regions south of the Bahamas Fracture Zone (BFZ) (South Palm Beach, Deerfield, Broward-Miami) and 35 were exclusive to the north (North Palm Beach, Martin), supporting the BFZ as a pivotal location that affects the coastal biogeographic extent of tropical marine species in eastern North America. Future tropicalization of reef fish assemblages are expected to be evident in temporal deviance of percent occurrence and/or relative species densities between baseline assemblages, where the poleward expansion of tropical species is expected to show the homogenization of assemblage regions as adjacent regions become more similar or the regional boundaries expand poleward. Ecoregions, habitat depth, habitat type, and relief should be incorporated into the stratification and analyses of reef fish surveys to statistically determine assemblage differences across the seascape, including those from tropicalization. [Abstract copyright: © 2024. The Author(s).]

KW - Animals

KW - Bahamas

KW - Community

KW - Coral Reefs

KW - Ecosystem

KW - Fishes

KW - Florida

KW - Fractures, Bone

KW - Humans

KW - Latitude

KW - North America

KW - Subtropical

KW - Western Atlantic

KW - Zoogeography

U2 - 10.1038/s41598-024-58185-6

DO - 10.1038/s41598-024-58185-6

M3 - Article

C2 - 38570549

VL - 14

SP - 7893

JO - Scientific Reports

JF - Scientific Reports

SN - 2045-2322

IS - 1

M1 - 7893

ER -