2018
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0203072
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Effects of depth on reef fish communities: Insights of a “deep refuge hypothesis” from Southwestern Atlantic reefs

Abstract: Deeper reefs are often considered to be less susceptible to local and global disturbances, such as overfishing, pollution and climate change, compared to shallow reefs and therefore could act as refugia for shallow water species. Hence, the interest on deeper reefs has happened at a time when shallow reefs are undergoing unprecedented changes. Here we investigated the hypothesis that fish community differed from shallow to deeper reefs due to factors apart from habitat structure and quality and therefore discu… Show more

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Cited by 32 publications
(26 citation statements)
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“…As our underwater visual survey can only provide a snapshot in time, it is possible that the present depthrelated observations reflect a natural seasonal variation in the distribution of fish communities. Nevertheless, similar to Pereira et al (2018), our results also suggest that fishing pressure, along with other natural or anthropogenic disturbances, may be attenuated in deeper waters, hence providing some protection that allows the persistence of higher biomass levels.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 80%
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“…As our underwater visual survey can only provide a snapshot in time, it is possible that the present depthrelated observations reflect a natural seasonal variation in the distribution of fish communities. Nevertheless, similar to Pereira et al (2018), our results also suggest that fishing pressure, along with other natural or anthropogenic disturbances, may be attenuated in deeper waters, hence providing some protection that allows the persistence of higher biomass levels.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 80%
“…diversity and abundance of fish species in coral reef ecosystems (e.g., Tyler et al, 2009;Pereira et al, 2018) and Mediterranean MPAs (Claudet et al, 2010). The main reasoning in support of the "deep reef refugia" hypothesis is that as depth increases, deeper parts of the reefs are less exposed to existing pressures (e.g., overfishing, pollution, temperature rise) than shallow reefs (Bongaerts et al, 2010).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The combination of thermal and chemical stress will make these environmental changes even more damaging (e.g., Donner et al, 2007Donner et al, , 2018Rodolfo-Metalpa et al, 2011;Prada et al, 2017;Bahr et al, 2018). Deeper water, mesophotic reefs have distinct communities and ecosystems when compared to shallow water reefs (e.g., Bongaerts et al, 2010;Pereira et al, 2018;Rocha et al, 2018) but are, nevertheless, likely to experience severe thermal stress (Schramek et al, 2018). Given the issues of accuracy and resolution in predicting aragonite values at 100 m depth shown in this work, it is hard to make confident conclusions about the fate of mesophotic reefs.…”
Section: Discussion: Gulf Corals In the Anthropocenementioning
confidence: 99%
“…More importantly, the combination of heat and acidity stresses can often act synergistically (e.g., Rodolfo-Metalpa et al, 2011;Prada et al, 2017), meaning that even moderate heating and aragonite decreases can amplify each other leading to intolerable conditions for coral reefs. Furthermore, with surface oceans getting warmer and more acidic (low ) waters at depth, it is possible that surface-adapted reef communities in the GoM will have no suitable refuge by the end of the century (e.g., Pereira et al, 2018;Rocha et al, 2018).…”
Section: Ocean Carbonate Chemistrymentioning
confidence: 99%