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abundance of giant sea anemones and patterns of association with anemonefishin the northern red sea

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 October 2005

nanette e. chadwick
Affiliation:
faculty of life sciences, bar ilan university, ramat gan 52900, israel, and interuniversity institute for marine science, eilat 88103, israel department of biological sciences, 101 rouse life sciences building, auburn university, auburn, al 36849-5407, usa, e-mail: chadwick@auburn.edu
michael arvedlund
Affiliation:
university of the ryukyus, tropical biosphere research center, sesoko station, sesoko 3422, motobu, okinawa 905-0227, japan

Abstract

patterns of distribution and abundance of giant sea anemones and anemonefish were compared among coral reefs along the coastline of sinai in the northern red sea. the sea anemones varied widely in abundance between reef areas containing different habitat types. they were rare on steep reef slopes with abundant coral cover (=low-density anemone sites, 0.09–0.68 anemones per 1000 m2 of reef area), but were common at a site containing patch reefs interspersed with sand (=high-density anemone site, 6.00–8.11 anemones per 1000 m2). distributions of the endemic two-band anemonefish (amphiprion bicinctus) varied significantly between the two main host anemone species. at the high-density site, individuals of the sea anemone heteractis crispa either did not contain anemonefish, or were occupied by single juvenile fish as shown in previous studies. at low-density sites h. crispa usually hosted clusters of juvenile anemonefish. in contrast, individuals of the sea anemone entacmaea quadricolor hosted either single adult fish (high-density site) or pairs of breeding adults (low-density sites), frequently in addition to some juvenile fish. mechanisms that prevent anemonefish from reaching adult size and forming breeding pairs in h. crispa may include high fish mortality above a size threshold because this host cannot adequately protect them from predation when they become large, active emigration of fish to e. quadricolor as described in previous reports, and/or environmentally-controlled cessation of fish growth. we conclude that in the northern red sea, individuals of h. crispa potentially serve as nurseries for anemonefish.

Type
research article
Copyright
© 2005 marine biological association of the united kingdom

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