Fish endanger their lives fighting for food after coral bleaching
The colourfully patterned reef fish are the first to feel the effect of bleaching because they eat coral.
Sergeant major fish (Abudefduf saxatilis), also known as píntano, and spinytooth parrotfish (Calotomus spinidens) swim by a coral reef off the dive spot of Abu Dabbab along Egypt’s southern Red Sea coast north of Marsa Alam on September 17, 2022. – Beneath the waters off Egypt’s Red Sea coast a kaleidoscopic ecosystem teems with life, that could become the world’s “last coral refuge” as global heating eradicates reefs elsewhere, researchers say. Most shallow water corals, battered and bleached white by repeated marine heatwaves, are “unlikely to last the century,” the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change said this year. That threatens a devastating loss for the hundreds of millions of people worldwide who depend on the fish stocks that live and breed in these fragile ecosystems. (Photo by Khaled DESOUKI / AFP)
Fish that have lost food due to mass coral bleaching are getting into more unnecessary fights, causing them to expend precious energy and potentially threatening their survival, new research said yesterday.
With the future of the world’s coral reefs threatened by climate change, a team of researchers studied how a mass bleaching event affected 38 species of butterflyfish.
The colourfully patterned reef fish are the first to feel the effect of bleaching because they eat coral, so their “food source is hugely diminished really quickly”, said Sally Keith, a marine ecologist at Britain’s Lancaster University.
Mass bleaching
Keith and her colleagues had no idea a mass bleaching event was approaching when they first studied the fish at 17 reefs off Japan, the Philippines, Indonesia and Christmas Island.
But when one of history’s worst global bleaching events struck in 2016, it offered “the perfect opportunity” to study how it affected the fish’s behaviour, Keith told AFP.
The researchers returned within a year and were “shocked” to see the devastation of the once beautiful reefs, she said.
Donning their snorkels or scuba gear, the team watched the fish “swimming around looking for food that just isn’t there any more,” she added.
“There was a bit of crying in our masks.” Losing battle The bleaching particularly affected Acropora coral, the main food source for the butterflyfish.
That “changed the playing field of who’s eating what”, Keith said, putting different species of butterflyfish in increased competition for other types of coral.
Signal
When a butterflyfish wants to signal to a competitor that a particular bit of coral is theirs, they point their noses down and raise their spiny dorsal fins.
“It’s almost like raising your hackles,” Keith said. If that fails, one fish will chase the other, usually until the other gives up.
“I followed one [fish] for about 50m once; that was quite tiring, they’re very fast,” Keith said. The team observed 3 700 encounters between butterflyfish.
Before the coral bleaching event, different species of butterflyfish were able to resolve disputes using signalling around 28% of the time.
But that fell to just 10% after the bleaching event, bringing many “unnecessary attacks”, according to the new study in the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society B.
“Making poor decisions about who to fight and where to invest their really valuable energy, could be that little bit that tips them [the fish] over the edge towards actual starvation,” said Keith, the study’s lead author.
It is not clear if the fish will be able to adapt to the changes brought about by coral bleaching quickly enough, the researchers warned.
Bleaching could also have knock-on effects between species and also up the food chain, she added. Human-driven climate change has spurred mass coral bleaching as the world’s oceans get warmer.
Modelling research last year found that even if the Paris climate goal of holding global warming to 1.5ºC is reached, 99% of the world’s coral reefs will not be able to recover. At two degrees of warming, that number would rise to 100%.
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