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Behavior and space utilization of two common fishes within Caribbean mangroves: implications for the protective function of mangrove habitats
Authors:JA MacDonald  S Shahrestani  JS Weis
Institution:Department of Biological Sciences, Rutgers University, Newark NJ, 07102, USA
Abstract:Behaviors, activity budgets, and spatial locations of reef-associated schoolmaster snapper (Lutjanus apodus) and non-reef-associated checkered puffer (Sphoeroides testudineus) were cataloged in mangrove forests in Caribbean Honduras to see how and where they spent their time and whether this changed as they grew. For schoolmasters, swimming was the most common behavior, while checkered puffers spent the majority of their time resting. Both remained completely within (as opposed to outside) the mangrove roots and in the lower half of the water column most of the time. However, as the size of the fish increased there was a clear decrease in the time spent both within the root system and closer to the substrate; the larger fish spent more time higher up in the water column and outside the root system. This was observed in both the schoolmaster and the puffer; the schoolmaster subsequently moves to reefs while the puffer does not. Coupled with limited feeding, the results suggest a primarily protective function for mangroves.
Keywords:behavior  location  Lutjanus apodus  mangrove  ontogenetic shift  Sphoeroides testudineus
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