Abstract
Coral reefs are increasingly subjected to both local and global stressors, however, there is limited information on how reef organisms respond to their combined effects under natural conditions. This field study examined the growth response of the damselfish Neopomacentrus bankieri to the individual and combined effects of multiple abiotic factors. Turbidity, temperature, tidal movement, and wave action were recorded every 10 minutes for four months, after which the daily otolith growth of N. bankieri was aligned with corresponding abiotic conditions. Temperature was the only significant driver of daily otolith increment width, with increasing temperatures resulting in decreasing width. Although tidal movement was not a significant driver of increment width by itself, the combined effect of tidal movement and temperature had a greater negative effect on growth than temperature alone. Our results indicate that temperature can drive changes in growth even at very fine scales, and demonstrate that the cumulative impact of abiotic factors can be substantially greater than individual effects. As abiotic factors continue to change in intensity and duration, the combined impacts of them will become increasingly important drivers of physiological and ecological change.
Introduction
It has been well established that fluctuations in abiotic factors can influence natural environments across multiple organisational scales1,2,3. Abiotic influences on individual species can drive changes in community composition and ultimately ecosystem function4,5,6. As multiple lines of evidence accrue that humans are fundamentally modifying abiotic properties of ecosystems, it has become increasingly imperative to understand how these modifications influence organisms7,8,9.
Coral reefs are one the most productive and biologically diverse marine ecosystems on Earth and also one of the most threatened by human pressure10,11. Coral reefs are increasingly subjected to local stressors, such as changes in water clarity from land-based runoff12 and to global stressors, such as rising temperatures13 and decreasing pH levels14, due to climate change. Additionally, oceanographic features such as wind-wave climate are changing in response to rising temperatures15. Given the changes that are occurring, it is crucial to understand how human-induced and natural fluctuations in abiotic variables interact with each other and how organisms respond to the combined effect of local and global stressors3,16.
Our understanding of how abiotic factors directly affect coral reef fish has improved substantially over the last several years. Laboratory studies have indicated that turbidity can reduce foraging success, leading to reduced growth17. Increased temperature coupled with unlimited food supply can result in higher growth rates of coral reef fish18. However, above an optimal temperature, or in low food conditions with high temperature, growth declines19. Wave action and water flow can both positively and negatively impact foraging success in planktivorous fishes20,21. Nevertheless, despite increased knowledge on the effects of single abiotic factors, laboratory studies examining the effects of multiple abiotic factors on fish are in their infancy. Even when they exist, they are often focused on abiotic factors related to climate change, particularly temperature and pH22,23,24. Furthermore, while laboratory studies have the advantage of being able to control multiple abiotic factors, organisms’ responses are often tested under static conditions24. In the natural environment, abiotic factors vary over independent spatial and temporal scales. The timing, overlap, and intensity of each abiotic factor will greatly influence the response of individuals25. Understanding how abiotic factors influence coral reef fishes under natural conditions remains an important knowledge gap that is fundamental to our understanding of the risks facing marine resources.
Stochastic fluctuations in abiotic factors makes identifying the right scale or appropriate measures to assess the potential effects a challenge. Otolith biochronology is being increasingly employed to hind-cast the effects of abiotic factors on fish, often on annual and decadal scales26,27,28. However, hind-casting over such large time scales often requires the use of biogeochemical proxies or coarse resolution environmental data, both of which increase the uncertainty in identifying specific drivers of change2,29. A similar approach could be applied to examining the effects of abiotic fluctuations on daily otolith growth in fish. The width of daily otolith increments can provide estimates of daily resolved growth30 and has been used and validated as a common proxy for daily growth for several coral reef species31,32,33. While individual variations in growth may exist, the overall shared growth pattern of multiple fish within a population will reflect any environmental signal34. Thus, a combination of high resolution turbidity, temperature, wave, and tide (a proxy for water flow) data and daily measurements of otolith growth from fish experiencing known conditions can provide unique insight into how fluctuating environmental conditions may affect fish growth. An analysis of this kind will allow us to refine our understanding of the role of different abiotic factors in driving fish growth and how fish growth may change as each factor changes.
This study examined the daily otolith incremental widths of juvenile Neopomacentrus bankieri, a planktivorous damselfish, from three inshore coral reefs in the Great Barrier Reef. Measurements of turbidity, temperature, wave action, and tidal forcing at each reef were taken every 10 minutes for four months prior to the collection of fish. The growth increments of the otoliths of collected individuals were matched with the corresponding daily average of each parameter to determine the strength and significance of turbidity, temperature, tidal fluctuations, and wave action on daily growth.
Results
Measurement of environmental parameters
Turbidity ranged from 0-120.8 NTU across all sites from April 2nd to August 2nd in 2013 (Table 1) with peaks usually lasting for a few days before returning to background levels. Temperature ranged from 20.3–30.0 °C across all sites, with daily average temperature reducing throughout the study period from the highest level in April to the lowest in August. Wave action, measured as root mean squared (RMS) pressure, was quite variable throughout the study period, ranging from 0–0.162 m (an RMS of 0.162 m is approximately equivalent to a significant wave height of 1.6 m35). The tidal range in the region ranged from 0.9–6.3 m, with variations occurring over a period of approximately 2 weeks (Table 1). Daily average turbidity, wave action, and tidal range varied throughout the study period, whereas daily average temperature had a clear temporal signature (Supplementary Figs S1–4).
Relationship between somatic growth and otolith growth
There was a strong positively correlated relationship between both otolith length and width and standard length (r2 = 0.91 and 0.87, respectively, Supplementary Fig. S5). The residual plots of the model (Supplementary Fig. S6) indicated that the residuals were consistent with stochastic error. There was a much stronger relationship between otolith morphometrics and fish standard length than between the age of the individual and standard length (r2 = 0.71).
Relationship between abiotic factors and daily growth rate
Temperature was the only abiotic factor that significantly drove changes in growth, with higher temperatures leading to lower growth rates (P = 0.0013; Table 2; Fig. 1). This was regardless of the time of year the fish were caught, as date of growth was included in the model. Although not significant, there was a negative relationship between otolith growth and tidal range (Supplementary Fig. S7). Conversely, there was a positive, but non-significant relationship between wave action and otolith growth (Supplementary Fig. S8). Finally, there was no trend between turbidity and growth (Supplementary Fig. S9).
Effect of cumulative impacts on growth
The results of the cumulative impact assessment for turbidity and temperature indicated there was no difference in growth among “control”, “individual effects”, or “combined effects” conditions. Growth was significantly lower when fish were exposed to both high temperature only (P = 0.007; Fig. 2) as well as high temperatures and large tidal ranges (P = 0.001; Fig. 2) compared to growth during low temperatures and small tidal range conditions. Growth in fish exposed to the combined effects of high temperature and large tidal ranges was also significantly lower than growth in fish exposed to low temperatures but large tidal ranges (i.e., the individual effect of tide) (P = 0.03). Although there was not a significant difference between the individual effect of temperature and the combined effects of temperature and tide, the Cohen’s d values for the effect sizes among the four conditions indicate that the combined effect of temperature and tidal range was greater than the individual effect of each abiotic factor (Table 3).
Condition 1 = low temperature, small tidal range (control); 2 = low temperature, large tidal range (individual effect of tides); 3 = high temperature, small tidal range (individual effect of temperature); 4 = high temperature, large tidal range (combined effects of temperature and tide). Numbers above bars indicate the conditions between which there is a significant difference.
When the combined effects of temperature and wave action were examined, there was a significant reduction in growth between the control condition (low temperature high wave action) and both the combined effects condition (high temperature low wave action) and the individual effect of temperature condition (high temperature high wave action) (P = 0.03; Fig. 3). The Cohen’s d values indicate that there was limited additional influence of wave action when combined with temperature (Table 3).
Condition 1 = low temperature, high wave action (control); 2 = low temperature, low wave action (individual effect of waves); 3 = high temperature, high wave action (individual effect of temperature); 4 = high temperature, low wave action (combined effects of temperature and wave action). Numbers above bars indicate the conditions between which there is a significant difference.
Discussion
Small scale ecological processes such as foraging and growth are imperative for ecosystem functioning and population persistence36,37. This study illustrated that temperature was the primary abiotic factor driving coral reef fish otolith growth. Furthermore, our results indicate that even when tidal movement did not individually mediate changes in otolith growth, when combined with temperature, it caused a significant reduction in daily otolith growth beyond those seen by temperature alone. To our knowledge, this is the first time that otolith biochronology has been used to assess how multiple abiotic factors mediate fine-scale changes in coral reef fish otolith growth and represents a significant progression in our ability to detect and predict how abiotic fluctuations impact coral reef fish.
Our results are consistent with previous studies that have also indicated that temperature can mediate otolith growth27,38. Temperature plays a role in growth due to the acceleration of metabolic rates in warmer temperatures39. McLeod et al.18 found that larvae fed ad libitum increased daily growth as temperature increased, but also found that larvae on restricted diets had slower daily growth rates as temperature increased. Faster growth rates in higher temperatures can only be supported if ingestion rates increase, due to increased metabolic rates, which increases exponentially rather than linearly with temperature40,41. Additionally, increased temperature will only support increased growth up to an optimal temperature, after which, growth rates decline dramatically42. McLeod et al.33 recorded a non-linear relationship between larval otolith growth and mean water temperatures in two species, with the thermal optima for growth being surpassed at low latitude sites. Similarly, Morrongiello and Thresher38 only found a strong negative correlation between temperature and otolith growth in tiger flathead when at their equatorward range limit. Given that the results of the present study found a linear reduction in otolith growth as temperature increased, it is possible that there was not more food available to match the demands of the increases in metabolic rate due to increased temperature.
Several studies have identified potential drivers that could influence both otolith increment widths and somatic growth, including feeding regime43 and lipid reserves44. In contrast, Kingsford et al.45 found that water chemistry could change increment width, which would be unlikely to drive changes in somatic growth. However, the strong relationship found in this study between otolith dimensions and standard length of individual N. bankieri suggests that abiotic factors that are influencing otolith growth will also influence somatic growth. Additional factors, such as carry-over effects from pre-settlement life stages, may influence growth trajectories if they differ consistently among sites46. The vast majority of sampled fish in the present study were over 30 days old at the time of capture, thus making it problematic to test for site-specific carry-over effects influencing larval phenotype. However, while individual anomalies may make it difficult to compare otolith increment growth to absolute somatic growth, the use of population level otolith growth as a proxy for population level somatic growth can provide reasonable estimates, particularly in data poor regions or with species where laboratory testing is not possible29,34.
Previous meta-analyses have examined the potential for additive, synergistic, or antagonistic responses to multiple stressors16,24. However, all of these meta-analyses were based on experimental studies that were able to control conditions. Given that abiotic variables vary independently, it was not possible in our dataset to completely control for each variable. However, our results show that even when tide did not drive significant variation in growth, the combined effect of tide and temperature was greater than temperature alone. Increased temperature has been shown to reduce the aerobic scope of coral reef fishes, which could diminish their ability to effectively capture prey. Additionally, large tidal fluctuations can increase flow rates, which can make it harder for fish to catch prey21. A reduced capacity to react with fast moving prey could increase evasion success in planktonic prey21,47,48. In coral reef fishes, like most other organisms, food acquisition is one of the key daily activities dictating individual performance such as growth, reproduction and life expectancy49,50. Ultimately foraging success and growth can strongly affect patterns of distribution, abundance and population dynamics51.
Contrary to expectations, turbidity had no effect on daily growth. This is in contrast to published studies that show an effect of suspended sediment on coral reef fishes17,21. One of the potential confounding effects is that the sediment on nearshore reefs in the Great Barrier Reef is nutrient enriched52. When sediment is re-suspended, even if the fish could have reduced visual acuity, the nutrient enriched sediment may increase their food supply, and counteract any negative effects on foraging. However, Johansen and Jones21 found that Neopomacentrus bankieri did not experience a negative effect on foraging until 8 NTU; a daily average exceeded 30% of the time on the study reefs. N. bankieri is only found on nearshore reefs, whose communities can possess inherent resistance to higher turbidity based on natural turbidity regimes53,54. It was not possible to catch a species that occurs across multiple turbidity regimes, due to the extremely low abundances of other species on these coral reefs, despite suitable habitat (A. Wenger, unpublished data). Further research should focus on other species found on both turbid and clear-water coral reefs.
Climate-change models predict that tropical sea surface temperatures will increase by up to 3 °C this century55. Our results show that present day temperatures are already negatively affecting growth. While we were not able to measure food availability, food is rarely unlimited in the marine environment. It is evident, based on the results, that N. bankieri individuals were not able to maintain consistent growth rates through increases in their food intake. Elevated ocean temperatures are predicted to cause a 2–20% reduction in global marine primary production by 2100 56, which will be superimposed onto plankton communities that are naturally variable on a broad range of spatial and temporal scales57. Food variability combined with fluctuating abiotic factors will create a gradient of conditions that fish will face. Planktivorous coral reef fishes play a principal role in the continued health and diversity of coral reef ecosystems. Planktivorous fishes represent ~22% of all coral reef fish species and account for ~60% of the total fish biomass on coral reefs58. They are also the main food source for many ecologically and commercially important predator species59. Given that fishes in early life history stages require more energy than adults to withstand starvation (due to high metabolic rates and low energy storage) and are more prone to mortality60, temperature will differentially affect early life history stages of coral reef fishes. Small changes in mortality during early life history stages can have large impacts on cohort success61. Our study highlights the importance of examining systems holistically to be able to truly understand how each variable influences growth.
Methods
Measurement of environmental parameters
Three inshore coral reef locations in the Great Barrier Reef were chosen as study sites: Bay Rock Reef, Middle Reef, and Rattlesnake Island Reef (Fig. 4). In the GBR, the term ‘inshore’ applies to areas within 6 to 20 km of the coast62,63. Ecosystems within this inshore area, including coral reefs, are under pressure from increased sediment and nutrient loads carried by land runoff64. The three reefs considered in this study are exposed to runoff from the Burdekin River, the main sources of terrestrially sourced suspended sediment in the GBR65.
The map was generated using ArcMap v.10.2.1 (desktop.arcgis.com/en/arcmap/).
On the 2nd and 3rd of April, 2013, two nephelometers were placed at each reef within 200 meters of each other. The nephelometers were mounted on heavy steel frames that raised the instrument ~40 cm off the seafloor. Turbidity, temperature and pressure measurements were recorded every 10 min. Each turbidity and temperature record was an average of 250 measurements taken over a 1 sec period, the same was done for pressure; however, 10 consecutive readings were taken over a period of 10 seconds. The mean of the 10 pressure readings was then calibrated to provide a water depth, which was used to measure tidal variation, whilst their root-mean-square was used to give an expression of the variation in seabed pressure due to wave action (in meters). It should be noted that the 10 second period for the pressure measurements may not be long enough to detect all long wavelength swell waves, however these waves are uncommon in the Great Barrier Reef Lagoon. Sensors were equipped with an anti-fouling wiper which was activated every 2 h66. The nephelometer was calibrated before deployment to the standard 200 Nephelometer Turbidity Units (NTU). On the 14th of June, each nephelometer was retrieved, the data were downloaded, and the batteries were changed. The nephelometers were then re-deployed in the same locations.
Fish growth analysis
All collections were approved by the James Cook University Animal Ethics Committee, approval number A1932 and were completed in accordance to the guidelines laid out by the ethics committee and the Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority. From July 31st-August 2nd, 2013, juvenile Neopomacentrus bankieri were collected from each reef, between the two nephelometers, using clove oil and hand nets. Neopomacentrus bankieri is a planktivorous damselfish primarily found on inshore coral reefs21. Thirty-seven, 28, and 21 individuals were collected from Bay Rock, Middle Reef, and Rattlesnake, respectively (Fig. 1). Sagittal otoliths were extracted from each specimen and processed for interpretation of daily growth increments (DGIs). Sagittae were embedded on the end of a glass slide using Crystalbond 509 and ground to the nucleus using a lapidary grinding wheel (1200 grit). Sagittae were then re-affixed to the slide with the ground surface down and polished from the opposite side to produce a transverse section approximately 150 μm thick. Both sides of the resultant transverse section were then polished using 9, 3, and 0.3 μm lapping film sequentially, and polishing ceased when optimum clarity was achieved for interpretation of DGIs. Age was assigned to individuals by counting the DGIs from the core on three independent occasions using a compound microscope and final age was taken as the mean of the three counts, provided all counts were within 10% of the median. Samples with counts >10% of the median were excluded from the analysis. Settlement marks (representing settlement onto the reef benthos and metamorphosis from larval to benthic-associated stages) were identified as Type 1 following67.
Increment-width profiles were established for each individual using the Leica IM50 software. Increment widths were measured along the longest axis on the ventral side of the otolith. Increment-width profiles were “transition-centred” following68.
Relationship between somatic growth and otolith growth
In order to assess the relationship between otolith growth and somatic growth, a series of linear regressions were performed. The following relationships were examined: otolith length to standard length, otolith width to standard length, and post-settlement age to standard length. The residual plots of each model were examined to confirm random distribution of residuals.
Relationship between abiotic factors and daily growth rate
In order to determine the relationship between abiotic factors and daily growth rate, the daily average for turbidity, temperature, wave action, and tidal range was calculated for each reef, by averaging the measurements from each nephelometer. The presence of a clear settlement mark on the otoliths allowed for a calculation of date of settlement by back calculating from their death date using daily otolith rings. The otolith increment growth data for each fish was matched up with the appropriate daily average of the abiotic data. We offset the abiotic data by one day because of the lag time of 24 hours based on previous research which has shown that it takes 24 hours for settlement age pomacentrids to assimilate food and grow69. Only the first 14 days post-settlement were used, as this was the most reliable area on the sagittae to age26 and the majority of fish (99%) had data spanning this range.
Linear mixed effects modelling fit by restricted maximum likelihood was used to assess the significance of turbidity, temperature, tidal movement, and wave action in explaining variations in growth38. Since regression-based models can be sensitive to variables that are correlated, the variance inflation factors (VIF) for all predictor (i.e., abiotic) parameters used in the model were calculated to check for multi-collinearity. The VIFs for all parameters fell well below the common threshold value and therefore, no parameters needed to be excluded on the basis of collinearity70. Individual predictors were mean-centred to facilitate model convergence38. Because daily growth increments decline with each day, and to ensure the population level trend was not outweighed by individual variability, a standardised daily growth index for each age was calculated as

where GIs is the standardised growth, GIw, is the individual growth increment width, and GIm is the mean growth increment width within each age group34. The linear mixed effects model was generated using the lmer function in the R package lme471, with turbidity, temperature, tide, and wave action set as fixed factors and site and date set as random effects. We assumed a Gaussian distribution and checked the normal distribution of model residuals to confirm goodness of fit. To ensure we were meeting the assumptions of the model, we also checked the plotted residuals to ensure homoscedasticity prior to utilising the results of the model. Final model selection (to obtain the best-fit model while maintaining model parsimony) was decided using Bayesian Information Criterion (BIC)72. The significance of each parameter in explaining variation in growth was tested by undertaking Markov Chain Monte Carlo sampling with the function MCMCregress in the R package MCMCpack73. Three samples were run using non-overlapping, randomly selected seeds. Chain lengths were set to 1000 with a burnin of 100. A thinning rate of 5 was set to reduce autocorrelation. All chains were combined and chain mixing was tested. Finally, the posterior distribution of the chains was examined to determine the likelihood that the predictor variables were significantly influencing the variation in growth.
Effect of cumulative impacts on growth
Previous meta-analyses that have examined cumulative impacts have calculated the difference in the effect of individual variables on the response variable and the effect of combined variables, to test for additive, antagonistic, and synergistic effects16,24. The predicted relationship between each abiotic variable and growth from the linear mixed effects models were used to examine potential cumulative impacts. The 25th and 75th percentiles were calculated for each abiotic factor and only values below and above these percentiles were used. The percentile from both variables that was predicted to result in the highest growth were used as the “control condition”. To test for individual effects of each variable, one predictor variable at a time was changed to the reverse quantile (corresponding to predicted minimum growth) while keeping the other one constant and the corresponding growth data was extracted (individual effects conditions). Finally, to test for combined effects, both variables were changed to the quantile expected to give the minimum growth (combined effects condition). The differences in growth among the conditions were determined using a one way permutation test based on 10,000 Monte-Carlo re-samplings followed by a pairwise permutation test with an adjusted p value generated, both within the “coin” package in R74. To determine effect sizes, a Cohen’s d for each condition compared to the control was calculated75. The Cohen’s d value for each “individual effects” condition were combined and compared to the Cohen’s d value of the “combined effects” condition. If the values were equal, cumulative impacts would be additive, if the “combined effects” value was greater than the combined “individual effects” values, cumulative impacts would be synergistic, but it was less than the combined “individual effects” the cumulative impacts would be antagonistic. All statistical analyses were performed with R v.3.2.3 (R Core Team 2015).
Additional Information
How to cite this article: Wenger, A. S. et al. The impact of individual and combined abiotic factors on daily otolith growth in a coral reef fish. Sci. Rep. 6, 28875; doi: 10.1038/srep28875 (2016).
References
Dunson, W. A. & Travis, J. The Role of Abiotic Factors in Community Organization. The American Naturalist 138, 1067–1091 (1991).
Suding, K. N. et al. Scaling environmental change through the community‐level: a trait‐based response‐and‐effect framework for plants. Global Change Biology 14, 1125–1140 (2008).
Boyd, P. W., Lennartz, S. T., Glover, D. M. & Doney, S. C. Biological ramifications of climate-change-mediated oceanic multi-stressors. Nature Climate Change 5, 71–79 (2015).
Scheffer, M., Carpenter, S., Foley, J. A., Folke, C. & Walker, B. Catastrophic shifts in ecosystems. Nature 413, 591–596 (2001).
Freestone, A. L. & Inouye, B. D. Dispersal limitation and environmental heterogeneity shape scale-dependent diversity patterns in plant communities. Ecology 87, 2425–2432 (2006).
Mouillot, D., Graham, N. A., Villéger, S., Mason, N. W. & Bellwood, D. R. A functional approach reveals community responses to disturbances. Trends in Ecology & Evolution 28, 167–177 (2013).
Vitousek, P. M., Mooney, H. A., Lubchenco, J. & Melillo, J. M. Human domination of earth’s ecosystems. Science 277, 494–499 (1997).
Foley, J. A. et al. Global Consequences of Land Use. Science 309, 570–574, 10.1126/science.1111772 (2005).
Doney, S. C. The Growing Human Footprint on Coastal and Open-Ocean Biogeochemistry. Science 328, 1512–1516, 10.1126/science.1185198 (2010).
Moberg, F. & Folke, C. Ecological goods and services of coral reef ecosystems. Ecological economics 29, 215–233 (1999).
Hughes, T. P. et al. Climate change, human impacts, and the resilience of coral reefs. Science 301, 929–933 (2003).
McCulloch, M. et al. Coral record of increased sediment flux to the inner Great Barrier Reef since European settlement. Nature 421, 727–730 (2003).
Hoegh-Guldberg, O. Climate change, coral bleaching and the future of the world’s coral reefs. Marine and freshwater research 50, 839–866 (1999).
Perry, C. T. et al. Caribbean-wide decline in carbonate production threatens coral reef growth. Nature communications 4, 1402 (2013).
Hemer, M. A., Fan, Y., Mori, N., Semedo, A. & Wang, X. L. Projected changes in wave climate from a multi-model ensemble. Nature climate change 3, 471–476 (2013).
Crain, C. M., Kroeker, K. & Halpern, B. S. Interactive and cumulative effects of multiple human stressors in marine systems. Ecology letters 11, 1304–1315 (2008).
Wenger, A. S., Johansen, J. L. & Jones, G. P. Increasing suspended sediment reduces foraging, growth and condition of a planktivorous damselfish. Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology 428, 43–48 (2012).
McLeod, I. M. et al. Climate change and the performance of larval coral reef fishes: the interaction between temperature and food availability. Conservation Physiology 1, cot024 (2013).
Munday, P. L., Jones, G. P., Pratchett, M. S. & Williams, A. J. Climate change and the future for coral reef fishes. Fish Fish 9, 261–285 (2008).
Clarke, R., Buskey, E. & Marsden, K. Effects of water motion and prey behavior on zooplankton capture by two coral reef fishes. Marine Biology 146, 1145–1155 (2005).
Johansen, J. & Jones, G. Sediment-induced turbidity impairs foraging performance and prey choice of planktivorous coral reef fishes. Ecological Applications 23, 1504–1517 (2013).
Nowicki, J. P., Miller, G. M. & Munday, P. L. Interactive effects of elevated temperature and CO2 on foraging behavior of juvenile coral reef fish. Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology 412, 46–51 (2012).
Miller, G., Kroon, F., Metcalfe, S. & Munday, P. Temperature is the evil twin: effects of increased temperature and ocean acidification on reproduction in a reef fish. Ecological Applications 25, 603–620 (2015).
Przeslawski, R., Byrne, M. & Mellin, C. A review and meta‐analysis of the effects of multiple abiotic stressors on marine embryos and larvae. Global change biology 21, 2122–2140 (2015).
Gunderson, A. R., Armstrong, E. J. & Stillman, J. H. Multiple Stressors in a Changing World: The Need for an Improved Perspective on Physiological Responses to the Dynamic Marine Environment. Annual Review of Marine Science 8, 357–378 (2016).
Morrongiello, J. R., Thresher, R. E. & Smith, D. C. Aquatic biochronologies and climate change. Nature Climate Change 2, 849–857 (2012).
Rountrey, A. N., Coulson, P. G., Meeuwig, J. J. & Meekan, M. Water temperature and fish growth: otoliths predict growth patterns of a marine fish in a changing climate. Global change biology 20, 2450–2458 (2014).
Nguyen, H. M. et al. Growth of a deep-water, predatory fish is influenced by the productivity of a boundary current system. Scientific reports 5 (2015).
Hüssy, K., Mosegaard, H., Hinrichsen, H.-H. & Böttcher, U. Factors determining variations in otolith microincrement width of demersal juvenile Baltic cod Gadus morhua. Marine Ecology-Progress Series 258, 243–251 (2003).
Campana, S. E. & Thorrold, S. R. Otoliths, increments, and elements: keys to a comprehensive understanding of fish populations? Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences 58, 30–38 (2001).
Victor, B. Daily otolith increments and recruitment in two coral-reef wrasses, Thalassoma bifasciatum and Halichoeres bivittatus. Marine Biology 71, 203–208 (1982).
Brunton, B. J. & Booth, D. J. Density- and size-dependent mortality of a settling coral-reef damselfish (Pomacentrus moluccensis Bleeker). Oecologia 137, 377–384 (2003).
McLeod, I. et al. Latitudinal variation in larval development of coral reef fishes: implications of a warming ocean. Mar Ecol Prog Ser 521, 129–141 (2015).
Black, B. A., Matta, M. E., Helser, T. E. & Wilderbuer, T. K. Otolith biochronologies as multidecadal indicators of body size anomalies in yellowfin sole (Limanda aspera). Fisheries Oceanography 22, 523–532 (2013).
Macdonald, R. K. Light attenuation and water turbidity in coastal great barrier reef waters (Unpublished doctoral thesis). James Cook University, Townsville, Australia (2016).
Cornell, H. V. & Lawton, J. H. Species interactions, local and regional processes, and limits to the richness of ecological communities: a theoretical perspective. J Anim Ecol 61, 1–12 (1992).
Peterson, G., Allen, C. R. & Holling, C. S. Ecological resilience, biodiversity, and scale. Ecosystems 1, 6–18 (1998).
Morrongiello, J. R. & Thresher, R. E. A statistical framework to explore ontogenetic growth variation among individuals and populations: a marine fish example. Ecological Monographs 85, 93–115 (2015).
Pörtner, H. Climate change and temperature-dependent biogeography: oxygen limitation of thermal tolerance in animals. Naturwissenschaften 88, 137–146 (2001).
Houde, E. D. Comparative growth, mortality, and energetics of marine fish larvae: temperature and implied latitudinal effects. Fishery Bulletin 87, 471–495 (1989).
Dillon, M. E., Wang, G. & Huey, R. B. Global metabolic impacts of recent climate warming. Nature 467, 704–706 (2010).
Jobling, M. Temperature and growth: modulation of growth rate via temperature change in Global warming: implications for freshwater and marine fish (eds. Wood, C. M. & McDonald, D. G. ) 225–254 (Cambridge University Press, 1997).
McCormick, M. & Molony, B. Effects of feeding history on the growth characteristics of a reef fish at settlement. Marine Biology 114, 165–173 (1992).
Molony, B. & Sheaves, M. Otolith increment widths and lipid contents during starvation and recovery feeding in adult Ambassis vachelli (Richardson). Journal of experimental marine biology and ecology 221, 257–276 (1998).
Kingsford, M. J., Patterson, H. M. & Flood, M. J. The influence of elemental chemistry on the widths of otolith increments in the neon damselfish (Pomacentrus coelestis). Fishery Bulletin 106, 135–142 (2008).
McCormick, M. I. & Gagliano, M. In Proceedings of 11th International Coral Reef Symposium. 305–310.
Buskey, E. J., Coulter, C. & Strom, S. Locomotory patterns of microzooplankton: potential effects on food selectivity of larval fish. Bulletin of Marine Science 53, 29–43 (1993).
Visser, A. W., Mariani, P. & Pigolotti, S. Swimming in turbulence: zooplankton fitness in terms of foraging efficiency and predation risk. Journal of Plankton Research 31, 121–133 (2009).
Donelson, J. M., McCormick, M. I. & Munday, P. L. Parental condition affects early life-history of a coral reef fish. J Exp Mar Biol Ecol 360, 109–116 (2008).
Kerrigan, B. A. Post-settlement growth and body composition in relation to food availability in a juvenile tropical reef fish. Mar. Ecol. Prog. Ser. 111, 7–15 (1994).
Jones, G. P. & McCormick, M. I. In Coral reef fishes-dynamics of a coral reef fish population (ed P. F. Sale ) 221–238 (Academic Press, 2002).
Kroon, F. J. et al. River loads of suspended solids, nitrogen, phosphorous and herbicides delivered to the Great Barrier Reef lagoon. Mar Pol Bull 65, 167–181 (2012).
Albert, S., Fisher, P. L., Gibbes, B. & Grinham, A. Corals persisting in naturally turbid waters adjacent to a pristine catchment in Solomon Islands. Marine pollution bulletin 94, 299–306 (2015).
Wenger, A. S. et al. Effects of reduced water quality on coral reefs in and out of no‐take marine reserves. Conservation Biology 30, 142–153 (2016).
Ganachaud, A. S. et al. Observed and expected changes to the tropical Pacific Ocean. Vulnerability of tropical Pacific fisheries and aquaculture to climate change. Secretariat of the Pacific Community, Noumea, New Caledonia 101–187 (2011).
Steinacher, M. et al. Projected 21st century decrease in marine productivity: a multi-model analysis. Biogeosciences 7 (2010).
Sorokin, Y. I. & Sorokin, P. Y. Analysis of plankton in the southern Great Barrier Reef: abundance and roles in throphodynamics. Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom 89, 235–241 (2009).
Bellwood, D. R. & Hughes, T. P. Regional-scale assembly rules and biodiversity of coral reefs. Science 292, 1532–1535 (2001).
Boaden, A. & Kingsford, M. Predators drive community structure in coral reef fish assemblages. Ecosphere 6, 1–33 (2015).
Post, J. R. & Parkinson, E. A. Energy allocation strategy in young fish: allometry and survival. Ecology 82, 1040–1051 (2001).
Houde, E. D. Fish early life dynamics and recruitment variability. Am Fish Soc Symp 2, 17–29 (1987).
Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority. Great Barrier Reef Outlook Report 2014. (2014).
Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority. Water quality guidelines for the Great Barrier Reef Marine Park 2010 current edition. (2010).
Kroon, F. J., Thorburn, P., Schaffelke, B. & Whitten, S. Towards protecting the Great Barrier Reef from land‐based pollution. Global change biology (2016).
Kroon, F. J. et al. River loads of suspended solids, nitrogen, phosphorus and herbicides delivered to the Great Barrier Reef lagoon. Marine pollution bulletin 65, 167–181 (2012).
Ridd, P. & Larcombe, P. Biofouling control for optical backscatter suspended sediment sensors. Marine Geology 116, 255–258 (1994).
Wilson, D. & McCormick, M. Microstructure of settlement-marks in the otoliths of tropical reef fishes. Marine Biology 134, 29–41 (1999).
Wilson, D. T. & McCormick, M. I. Spatial and temporal validation of settlement-marks in the otoliths of tropical reef fishes. Marine Ecology Progress Series 153, 259–271 (1997).
McLeod, I. M. & Clark, T. D. Limited capacity for faster digestion in larval coral reef fish at an elevated temperature. PLoS One 11, e0155360 (2016).
O’brien, R. M. A caution regarding rules of thumb for variance inflation factors. Quality & Quantity 41, 673–690 (2007).
Bates, D., Mächler, M., Bolker, B. & Walker, S. Fitting linear mixed-effects models using lme4. Journal of Statistical Software 67, 1–48 (2014).
Schwarz, G. Estimating the dimension of a model. The annals of statistics 6, 461–464 (1978).
Martin, A. D., Quinn, K. M. & Park, J. H. Mcmcpack: Markov chain monte carlo in R. Journal of Statistical Software, 42, 1–21 (2011).
Hothorn, T., Hornik, K., van de Wiel, M. A. & Zeileis, A. Implementing a Class of Permutation Tests: The coin Package. 28, 23, 10.18637/jss.v028.i08 (2008).
Cohen, J. Statistical power analysis for the behavioral sciences 2nd edn (Earlbaum, 1988).
Acknowledgements
All collections were approved by the James Cook University Animal Ethics Committee, approval number A1932. This study was funded by a CSIRO Water for a Healthy Country Flagship Fellowship award to A.S.W. The authors thank K.B., A.G., A.H., T.H., C.M. and T.S. for field assistance and J.O. for statistical advice. The authors are grateful to P.R., who lent his nephelometers to us.
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Contributions
A.S.W., J.W. and F.K. conceived the experiment; A.S.W. and J.W. conducted the field work; B.T. analysed the otoliths; A.S.W. conducted the statistical analyses; A.S.W., J.W., B.T. and F.K. wrote the manuscript.
Corresponding author
Ethics declarations
Competing interests
The authors declare no competing financial interests.
Supplementary information
Rights and permissions
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License. The images or other third party material in this article are included in the article’s Creative Commons license, unless indicated otherwise in the credit line; if the material is not included under the Creative Commons license, users will need to obtain permission from the license holder to reproduce the material. To view a copy of this license, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
About this article
Cite this article
Wenger, A., Whinney, J., Taylor, B. et al. The impact of individual and combined abiotic factors on daily otolith growth in a coral reef fish. Sci Rep 6, 28875 (2016). https://doi.org/10.1038/srep28875
Received:
Accepted:
Published:
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/srep28875
This article is cited by
-
Projected effects of ocean warming on an iconic pelagic fish and its fishery
Scientific Reports (2021)
-
Applying a ridge-to-reef framework to support watershed, water quality, and community-based fisheries management in American Samoa
Coral Reefs (2019)
-
Planktonic larval duration, early growth, and the influence of dietary input on the otolith microstructure of Scolopsis bilineatus (Nemipteridae)
Environmental Biology of Fishes (2019)
Comments
By submitting a comment you agree to abide by our Terms and Community Guidelines. If you find something abusive or that does not comply with our terms or guidelines please flag it as inappropriate.