Zoology - Theses

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    Patterns in the distribution and abundance of reef fishes in South Eastern Australia
    Colton, Madhavi A. ( 2011)
    This research investigated patterns in the distribution and abundance of nearshore fishes of south-eastern Australia. I used two methods to survey fishes, underwater visual census (UVC) and baited remote underwater video (BRUV). A comparison between these methods revealed that BRUV recorded higher relative abundance of mobile predators, while UVC observed higher relative abundance of herbivores, territorial species, and small site-attached species. These results suggest that studies surveying diversity would do best to employ multiple methods. In cases where funds are limited, UVC may provide a more complete estimate of diversity than BRUV as UVC recorded higher diversity, species richness and more individuals. Combining measures of abundance with habitat data, I investigated fish-habitat associations, specifically exploring how altering spatial grain influenced the strength of correlations between fish and habitat. Species of different sizes responded to habitat measured over different scales, with large-bodied species only displaying strong correlations with habitat when it was measured over large scales. These results suggest that research quantifying fish-habitat associations needs to take spatial grain into account. In addition, many species may respond to changes in habitat at scales larger than are typically investigated. Understanding not only how species interact with their environment but also the scale at which these associations occur is essential for management and conservation. I investigated biogeographic patterns in the distribution of fishes in Victoria using abundance measured by BRUV and UVC. The BRUV data displayed a cline in change across the state in which dissimilarities between locations were linearly related to distance. In contrast, data collected using UVC indicated the presence of a large faunal break in the vicinity of Ninety Mile Beach, and a second break between Cape Conran and Cape Howe, suggesting that contemporary habitat discontinuity, flow and/or temperature may be important factors structuring communities in this region. At a still larger scale, I explored relationships at upper and lower bounds between body size, geographic range size and abundance using data collected from Australia and New Zealand. At maxima, the relationship between body size and abundance was negative but steeper than expected, possibly driven by diver-averse behaviour of large species. At minima, body size and geographic range size were positively related, implying that body size determines the minimum area that a species must occupy. In contrast, at the upper bound this relationship was negative for non-perciform fishes, a K-selected group whose geographic range size could be constrained by their limited dispersal capacity. Distribution-abundance relationships deviated from predictions, with a negative relationship at the upper bound for Perciformes, which could be driven by the high dispersal potential of widespread species that results in diffuse low-density populations. From these results, I concluded, first, that fishes appear to differ from terrestrial taxa, which may be attributed in part to large-bodied fishes’ limited capacity for dispersal. Second, the approach of applying regressions to maxima and minima uncovered relationships that would have been obscured had they been investigated at the mean, highlighting the importance of exploring limits in macroecological relationships.