Cryptofaunal communities are influenced by benthic cover and fish abundance in a large Caribbean coral reef system
Cryptofaunal communities are influenced by benthic cover and fish abundance in a large Caribbean coral reef system
Date
2024-10-05
Authors
Armenteros,Maickel
Díaz-Delgado, Yarima
Marzo-Pérez, Diana
Pérez-García,José A.
Hernández-Fernández, Leslie
González de Zayas, Roberto
Navarro-Martínez, Zenaida M.
Apprill Amy
Díaz-Delgado, Yarima
Marzo-Pérez, Diana
Pérez-García,José A.
Hernández-Fernández, Leslie
González de Zayas, Roberto
Navarro-Martínez, Zenaida M.
Apprill Amy
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DOI
10.1007/s00338-024-02572-y
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Keywords
Cryptofauna
Copepods
Nematodes
Macrofauna
Meiofauna
Caribbean sea
Copepods
Nematodes
Macrofauna
Meiofauna
Caribbean sea
Abstract
Small-sized invertebrates inhabiting hard substrates in coral reefs (a.k.a. cryptofauna) contribute substantially to reef biodiversity, but their patterns of distribution and ecological controls are poorly understood. Here, we characterized the cryptofauna community and explored “bottom-up” and “top-down” controls by benthic cover and fish abundance, respectively. We sampled the cryptofauna inhabiting the reef terrace from 13 sites along 200 km in Jardines de la Reina (Cuba), a well-preserved and protected area in the Caribbean. We counted 23,959 invertebrates of 14 higher taxa, being the most abundant Copepoda (54%), Nematoda (21%), Mollusca (7%), Ostracoda (5%), Polychaeta (5%), and Amphipoda (3%). Richness, abundance, and community structure varied across the reefs without any geographical gradient of distribution. One-third of the variance occurred at site scale (~ 10 km), and half occurred at quadrat scale (~ 1 m). Algal cover promoted cryptofauna richness and abundance likely providing substrate and food, while live coral cover negatively influenced nematode abundances, potentially due to coral defenses. Relationships between cryptofauna and reef fishes were also present, with invertivores and herbivores negatively affecting cryptofauna abundance likely due to direct or indirect predation pressures. This research highlights the important roles of bottom-up and top-down controls, by algal/coral cover and fishes, respectively, on cryptofauna and in extension to coral reef biodiversity. Current threats by climate change are expected to alter these controls on cryptofauna resulting in changes to diversity, trophodynamics and energy flows of coral reefs.
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© The Author(s), 2024. This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License. The definitive version was published in Armenteros, M., Díaz-Delgado, Y., Marzo-Pérez, D., Pérez-García, J., Hernández-Fernández, L., de Zayas, R., Navarro-Martínez, Z., & Apprill, A. (2024). Cryptofaunal communities are influenced by benthic cover and fish abundance in a large Caribbean coral reef system. Coral Reefs, 43, 1731-1748, doi: 10.1007/s00338-024-02572-y.
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Armenteros, M., Díaz-Delgado, Y., Marzo-Pérez, D., Pérez-García, J., Hernández-Fernández, L., de Zayas, R., Navarro-Martínez, Z., & Apprill, A. (2024). Cryptofaunal communities are influenced by benthic cover and fish abundance in a large Caribbean coral reef system. Coral Reefs, 43, 1731-1748.