Weed-eating fish key to reef`s survival

A new study has found that weed-eating fish can only keep coral reefs clear of weed up to a point.

Sydney: Preserving a species of weed-eating fish may be the key to saving the world`s coral reefs from being engulfed by weed as human and climate impacts grow.
A new study by the Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies (CoECRS) has found weed-eaters like parrotfish and surgeonfish can only keep coral reefs clear of weed up to a point.

For some years, researchers have pinned their hopes on the ability of weed-eating fish to keep the weeds at bay while the corals recover following a major setback like bleaching, a dump of sediment from the land, or a violent cyclone, the journal Ecology Letters reports.

However, the latest work by Andrew Hoey and David Bellwood at CoECRS and James Cook University shows that once the weeds reach a certain density, the fish no longer control them, and prefer to graze less weedy areas.

"As a result, the whole system tips from being coral-dominated to weed-dominated," Andrew says, according to a CoECRS statement.

"In countries where people harvest the weed-eating fishes with spearguns, nets and so on, like Fiji, we are seeing a fundamental change in the nature of reefs from coral to weeds," Andrew says.

"In Australia, where there is much less harvesting of herbivorous fish, the corals are in better shape and bounce back more readily from setbacks."

"My wife and I must have watched hours and hours of video of fish feeding on weeds and counting the number of bites they took. It`s one of the less glamorous aspects of doing marine science," Andrews admits with a laugh.

IANS

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