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Tropical seamounts as stepping-stones for coral reef fishes: range extensions and new regional distributions from mesophotic ecosystems in the Coral Sea, Australia
Galbraith, G.F.; Cresswell, B.J.; McClure, E.C.; Hoey, A.S. (2023). Tropical seamounts as stepping-stones for coral reef fishes: range extensions and new regional distributions from mesophotic ecosystems in the Coral Sea, Australia. Research Square 3342963/v1: 1-40. https://doi.org/10.21203/rs.3.rs-3342963/v1
In: Research Square (Preprints). Research Square: Durham. ISSN 2693-5015

Beschikbaar in  Auteurs 
Documenttype: Preprint

Trefwoorden
    Biodiversity
    ISEW, Coral Sea
    Topographic features > Submarine features > Seamounts
    Coral Sea [Marine Regions]
    Marien/Kust
Author keywords
    coral reef fishes, mesophotic coral ecosystems, ROVs, BRUVs

Auteurs  Top 
  • Galbraith, G.F.
  • Cresswell, B.J.
  • McClure, E.C.
  • Hoey, A.S.

Abstract
    Seamounts and remote oceanic islands provide valuable natural laboratories in which to study patterns and processes in marine biodiversity. A central hypothesis arising from studies of these systems is the ecological function of seamounts as stepping stones for dispersal and population connectivity. Evidence of this mechanism exists for a range of taxa, including coral reef fishes, but is still lacking from many tropical seamounts in remote regions. In this study, we used remotely operated vehicles and baited remote underwater video systems to survey fish and benthic communities between 1 – 100m on seamounts in the Coral Sea Marine Park (CSMP), Australia. We found evidence to support the stepping stone model of ecological connectivity from new observations of sixteen coral reef fishes which have previously not been recorded by quantitative surveys in the region. The widespread distribution of many of these species throughout the full latitudinal extent of the CSMP suggests that the there is greater connectivity between mesophotic habitats in the Coral Sea and surrounding biogeographic regions than previously known. We also found a wide variety of mesophotic habitats and recorded significant depth range extensions for seventy-eight fishes in these habitats. This further highlights the potential role of increased habitat area and heterogeneity in a stepping stone effect throughout the region. Four of the fish occurrence records represent significant range extensions into the Coral Sea from adjacent biogeographic regions and thirteen fishes recorded by this study in the CSMP are not known from the neighbouring Great Barrier Reef, despite its close proximity. Although the Coral Sea remains relatively understudied, these findings suggest that larger-scale models of marine biogeography are relevant to communities in the region, particularly at mesophotic depths. Given the extent and the spatial arrangement of seamounts in the Coral Sea, our findings emphasise that the region is an important link between the centre of marine biodiversity in the Coral Triangle and the Southwest Pacific. Greater mesophotic sampling effort and genetic studies are necessary to understand the nature of connectivity and, to establish the role of regional seamount chains, like the Coral Sea reefs, in broader marine biogeographic processes.

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