Influence of depth on sex-specific energy allocation patterns in a tropical reef fish

Journal Publication ResearchOnline@JCU
Hoey, J.;McCormick, M.I.;Hoey, A.S.
Abstract

The effect of depth on the distribution and sex-specific energy allocation patterns of a common coral reef fish, Chrysiptera rollandi (Pomacentridae), was investigated using depth-stratified collections over a broad depth range (5–39 m) and a translocation experiment. C. rollandi consistently selected rubble habitats at each depth, however abundance patterns did not reflect the availability of the preferred microhabitat suggesting a preference for depth as well as microhabitat. Reproductive investment (gonado-somatic index), energy stores (liver cell density and hepatocyte vacuolation), and overall body condition (hepato-somatic index and Fulton's K) of female fish varied significantly among depths and among the three reefs sampled. Male conspecifics displayed no variation between depth or reef. Depth influenced growth dynamics, with faster initial growth rates and smaller mean asymptotic lengths with decreasing depth. In female fish, relative gonad weight and overall body condition (Fulton's K and hepato-somatic index) were generally higher in shallower depths (≤10 m). Hepatic lipid storage was highest at the deepest sites sampled on each reef, whereas hepatic glycogen stores tended to decrease with depth. Depth was found to influence energy allocation dynamics in C. rollandi. While it is unclear what processes directly influenced the depth-related patterns in energy allocation, this study shows that individuals across a broad depth gradient are not all in the same physiological state and may contribute differentially to the population reproductive output.

Journal

Coral Reefs

Publication Name

N/A

Volume

26

ISBN/ISSN

1432-0975

Edition

N/A

Issue

3

Pages Count

11

Location

N/A

Publisher

Springer

Publisher Url

N/A

Publisher Location

New York, USA -NY

Publish Date

N/A

Url

N/A

Date

N/A

EISSN

N/A

DOI

10.1007/s00338-007-0246-6