AI Article Synopsis

  • Researchers studied how coral reef fish populations change with the seasons and human disturbances in the Northern Persian Gulf.
  • They found two types of seasonal changes: one that occurs regardless of disturbances and another that varies with disturbance levels, especially in terms of species abundance and composition.
  • The study highlighted that certain fish families, particularly Nemipteridae, had a significant impact on the observed changes in fish communities over time.

Article Abstract

Seasonal dynamics of coral reef fish assemblages were assessed along a gradient of potential anthropogenic disturbance in the Northern Persian Gulf. Overall, the attributes of coral reef fish assemblages showed seasonality at two different levels: seasonal changes irrespective of the magnitude of disturbance level (e.g. species richness), and seasonal changes in response to disturbance level (e.g. total abundance and assemblage composition). The examined parameters mostly belonged to the second group, but the interpretation of the relationship between patterns of seasonal changes and the disturbance level was not straightforward. The abundance of carnivorous fishes did not vary among seasons. SIMPER identified the family Nemipteridae as the major contributor to the observed spatiotemporal variations in the composition of coral reef fish assemblages in the study area.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.marpolbul.2015.10.050DOI Listing

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