Understanding critical habitats of threatened and endemic animals is essential for mitigating extinction risks, developing recovery plans, and siting reserves, but assessment methods are generally lacking. We evaluated critical habitats of 8 threatened or endemic fish species on coral and rocky reefs of subtropical eastern Australia, by measuring physical and substratum-type variables of habitats at fish sightings. We used nonmetric and metric multidimensional scaling (nMDS, mMDS), Analysis of similarities (ANOSIM), similarity percentages analysis (SIMPER), permutational analysis of multivariate dispersions (PERMDISP), and other multivariate tools to distinguish critical habitats. Niche breadth was widest for 2 endemic wrasses, and reef inclination was important for several species, often found in relatively deep microhabitats. Critical habitats of mainland reef species included small caves or habitat-forming hosts such as gorgonian corals and black coral trees. Hard corals appeared important for reef fishes at Lord Howe Island, and red algae for mainland reef fishes. A wide range of habitat variables are required to assess critical habitats owing to varied affinities of species to different habitat features. We advocate assessments of critical habitats matched to the spatial scale used by the animals and a combination of multivariate methods. Our multivariate approach furnishes a general template for assessing the critical habitats of species, understanding how these vary among species, and determining differences in the degree of habitat specificity.
Journal article
Defining critical habitats of threatened and endemic reef fishes with a multivariate approach
Conservation Biology, Vol.28(6), pp.1688-1698
2014
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Abstract
Details
- Title
- Defining critical habitats of threatened and endemic reef fishes with a multivariate approach
- Creators
- Steven W Purcell - Southern Cross UniversityK Robert Clarke - Plymouth Marine LaboratoryKelvin Rushworth - Southern Cross UniversitySteven James Dalton - Southern Cross University
- Publication Details
- Conservation Biology, Vol.28(6), pp.1688-1698
- Identifiers
- 3454; 991012821545702368
- Academic Unit
- School of Environment, Science and Engineering; Marine Ecology Research Centre; Faculty of Science and Engineering
- Resource Type
- Journal article