Journal of Animal Behaviour and Biometeorology, Volume 9, Issue 1, Pages 1-11 , 01/01/2021

Coral and reef fish community recovery following the 2010 extreme ocean warming event (mass bleaching event) at Thailand

Krisanadej Jaroensutasinee, Sirirat Somchuea, Mullica Jaroensutasinee

Abstract

Reef fish play an important role in the community dynamics of coral reefs and maintaining healthy reefs. This study aimed to (1) assess coral recovery at reefs around Racha Yai Island after the 2010 mass coral bleaching event and (2) compare the fish community indices (Shannon diversity, evenness) and fish trophic functional groups between low (Patok Bay) and high (Khonkae Bay) environmental disturbance sites during 2013-2019. The fish surveys and the percent live cora covers from both bays during 2013-2019 were collected using the fish visual census method and a permanent quadrat method along 50-m transect lines. Our results showed that the percentage of live coral cover at both bays increased by 6 8%. At Khonkae Bay, there were 69 reef fish species and 10,684 individual fish belonging to 5 orders, with 27 families and 54 genera observed from 7 orders: Perciformes (91.03%), Tetraodontiformes (5.54%), Syngnathiformes (1.24%) Beloniformes (0.26%), Beryciformes (1.25%), Scorpaeniformes (0.70%), and Aulopiformes (0.06%). Fish community indices at Khonkae Bay increased during 2013-2019 and were composed of species richness (3.65-10.53), the Shannon index (0.65 3.49), and species evenness (0.49-0.91). At Patok Bay, there were 60 reef fish species and 10,362 individual fish belonging to 3 orders, with 22 families and 50 genera observed from 4 orders: Perciformes (93.04%), Tetraodontiformes (5.92%), Syngnathiformes (0.55%), and Anguilliformes (0.53%). Fish community indices at Patok Bay increased during 2014-2019 and were composed of species richness (4.69-8.62), the Shannon index (1.36-3.30), and species evenness (4.92-8.62). Ou results suggested that the 2010 mass coral bleaching event had large impacts on both the coral and reef fish community at both low and high environmental disturbance sites with good recovery over nine years.

Document Type

Article

Source Type

Journal

Keywords

EvennessFish trophic functional groupShannon diversitySpecies richness

ASJC Subject Area

Agricultural and Biological Sciences : Animal Science and ZoologyEarth and Planetary Sciences : Atmospheric ScienceEnvironmental Science : Ecology

Funding Agency

National Science and Technology Development Agency


Bibliography


Jaroensutasinee, K., Somchuea, S., & Jaroensutasinee, M. (2021). Coral and reef fish community recovery following the 2010 extreme ocean warming event (mass bleaching event) at Thailand. Journal of Animal Behaviour and Biometeorology, 9(1) 1-11. doi:10.31893/JABB.21004

Copy | Save