深海魔鬼:扩大一种稀有受保护鱼类的已知栖息地

Q3 Environmental Science
L. Fetterplace, J. Turnbull, N. Knott, N. Hardy
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引用次数: 10

摘要

摘要一个物种的公认地理范围与采样该范围的机会和努力有关。在人类进入受限的深水生态系统中,许多海洋物种的地理范围可能被低估。部署在未知暗礁深处的带诱饵相机的偶然记录显示,一条东部蓝魔鬼鱼(Paraplesiops bleekeri)在51米深处,比之前观察到的大陆架斜坡下2公里多。这是首次对东部蓝魔鬼鱼进行可验证的观察,它是澳大利亚东南部一种受保护的特有温带珊瑚礁物种,深度超过了通常接受的30米深度范围。对这种珊瑚礁和许多其他珊瑚礁物种的生态学知识通常仅限于浅海岸珊瑚礁,潜水员和研究人员很容易到达。许多珊瑚礁物种的合适栖息地似乎存在于更深的近海珊瑚礁上,但由于对这些通常未知的栖息地进行研究的后勤工作,很可能被忽视。根据我们在51米深度的观察和在深海珊瑚礁上捕捉东部蓝魔鬼鱼的休闲渔民的观察,我们认为目前东部蓝魔鬼鱼类的深度范围被低估了30米。我们还观察到一些常见的珊瑚礁物种远远超出了其可接受的深度范围。值得注意的是,无瑕豆娘(Mecaenichthys immaculatus)、红豆娘(Cheilodactylus fuscus。这种对深度的低估可能代表了大陆架上大片的深海珊瑚礁和微型栖息地,这可能有助于东部蓝魔鬼鱼抵御灭绝风险,并有助于许多珊瑚物种抵御气候变化
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Devil in the Deep: Expanding the Known Habitat of a Rare and Protected Fish
Abstract The accepted geographic range of a species is related to both opportunity and effort in sampling that range. In deepwater ecosystems where human access is limited, the geographic ranges of many marine species are likely to be underestimated. A chance recording from baited cameras deployed on deep uncharted reef revealed an eastern blue devil fish (Paraplesiops bleekeri) at a depth of 51 m and more than 2 km further down the continental shelf slope than previously observed. This is the first verifiable observation of eastern blue devil fish, a protected and endemic southeastern Australian temperate reef species, at depths greater than the typically accepted depth range of 30 m. Knowledge on the ecology of this and many other reef species is indeed often limited to shallow coastal reefs, which are easily accessible by divers and researchers. Suitable habitat for many reef species appears to exist on deeper offshore reefs but is likely being overlooked due to the logistics of conducting research on these often uncharted habitats. On the basis of our observation at a depth of 51 m and observations by recreational fishers catching eastern blue devil fishes on deep offshore reefs, we suggest that the current depth range of eastern blue devil fish is being underestimated at 30 m. We also observed several common reef species well outside of their accepted depth range. Notably, immaculate damsel (Mecaenichthys immaculatus), red morwong (Cheilodactylus fuscus), mado (Atypichthys strigatus), white-ear (Parma microlepis) and silver sweep (Scorpis lineolata) were abundant and recorded in a number of locations at up to a depth of at least 55 m. This underestimation of depth potentially represents a large area of deep offshore reefs and micro-habitats out on the continental shelf that could contribute to the resilience of eastern blue devil fish to extinction risk and contribute to the resilience of many reef species to climate change
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来源期刊
European Journal of Ecology
European Journal of Ecology Environmental Science-Ecology
CiteScore
1.80
自引率
0.00%
发文量
6
审稿时长
11 weeks
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