• Media type: E-Article
  • Title: Island Biogeography of Caribbean Coral Reef Fish
  • Contributor: Sandin, Stuart A.; Vermeij, Mark J. A.; Hurlbert, Allen H.; Olden, Julian
  • imprint: Blackwell Publishing, 2008
  • Published in: Global Ecology and Biogeography
  • Language: English
  • DOI: 10.1111/j.1466-8238.2008.00418.x
  • ISSN: 1466-822X
  • Origination:
  • Footnote:
  • Description: <p>Aim: The goal of our study was to test fundamental predictions of biogeographical theories in tropical reef fish assemblages, in particular relationships between fish species richness and island area, isolation and oceanographic variables (temperature and productivity) in the insular Caribbean. These analyses complement an analogous and more voluminous body of work from the tropical Indo-Pacific. The Caribbean is more limited in area with smaller inter-island distances than the Indo-Pacific, providing a unique context to consider fundamental processes likely to affect richness patterns of reef fish. Location: Caribbean Sea. Methods: We compiled a set of data describing reef-associated fish assemblages from 24 island nations across the Caribbean Sea, representing a wide range of isolation and varying in land area from 53 to 110,860 km². Regression-based analyses compared the univariate and combined effects of island-specific physical predictors on fish species richness. Results: We found that diversity of reef-associated fishes increases strongly with increasing island area and with decreasing isolation. Richness also increases with increasing nearshore productivity. Analyses of various subsets of the entire data set reveal the robustness of the richness data and biogeographical patterns. Main conclusions: Within the relatively small and densely packed Caribbean basin, fish species richness fits the classical species-area relationship. Richness also was related negatively to isolation, suggesting direct effects of dispersal limitation in community assembly. Because oceanic productivity was correlated with isolation, however, the related effects of system-wide productivity on richness cannot be disentangled. These results highlight fundamental mechanisms that underlie spatial patterns of biodiversity among Caribbean coral reefs, and which are probably also are functioning in the more widespread and heterogeneous reefs of the Indo-Pacific.</p>