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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Spatial dynamics of Red Sea coral reef fish assemblages: a taxonomic and ecological trait approach

Gil Ramos, Gloria Lisbet 04 1900 (has links)
Despite the increases in the intensity and frequency of disturbances on coral reefs in the Red Sea over the past decade, patterns of variability in fish communities are still poorly understood. This study aims to contribute to a better understanding of how fish communities vary along multiple spatial scales (10-100’ of kilometers) and to provide a baseline for future comparisons, fundamental to assess responses to climate change and other disturbances. Coral reefs along the Saudi Arabian Red Sea coast were surveyed from 2017 to 2019. The reefs ranged from 28° N to 18 °N and were categorized according their geographical location and grouped within three regions, namely north (24-28.5°N; 12 reefs), central (20.4-22.3°N; 11 reefs), and south (18.5-21.2°N; 30 reefs). The quantification of spatial patterns was conducted based on both taxonomic- and trait-based approaches. Considering the dependence of fish communities on the benthic habitat the relationship between different attributes of the fish assemblages and coral cover was also investigated. A consistent pattern of separation between assemblages of the northern and central region from the ones in the south was observed in nearshore reefs but was not evident for offshore reefs. The southern region supported higher densities, biomass, and species richness than the other two regions. The analysis showed that transect and reef scales contributed to the greatest variation in fish communities, suggesting higher levels of variability within small spatial scales. Several parameters of the fish community (total species, total density, total biomass, total functional entities, functional richness, functional redundancy) were positively correlated to coral cover, particularly in the northern region. Responses were not consistent across the Red Sea basin, suggesting that management plans should be regionally based. This study can be helpful to design management strategies as it provides a current baseline from both taxonomic and trait perspectives for Red Sea reefs that can be used to evaluate future changes due to natural and human-based disturbances.
2

Integrating Towed Underwater Video with Multibeam Acoustics for Mapping Benthic Habitat and Assessing Reef Fish Communities on the West Florida Shelf

Ilich, Alexander Ross 02 November 2018 (has links)
Using a towed underwater video camera system, benthic habitats were classified along transects in a popular offshore fishing area on the West Florida Shelf (WFS) known as “The Elbow.” Additionally, high resolution multibeam bathymetry and co-registered backscatter data were collected for the entire study area. Using these data, full coverage geologic and biotic habitat maps were developed using both unsupervised and supervised statistical classification methodologies. The unsupervised methodology used was k-means clustering, and the supervised methodology used a random forest algorithm. The two methods produced broadly similar results; however, the supervised methodology outperformed the unsupervised methodology. The results of the supervised classification demonstrated “substantial agreement” (κ>0.6) between observations and predictions for both geologic and biotic habitat, while the results of the unsupervised classification demonstrated “moderate agreement” (κ>0.4) between observations and predictions for both geologic and biotic habitat. Comparisons were made with the previously existing map for this area created by Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission’s Fish and Wildlife Research Institute (FWC-FWRI). Some features are distinguishable in both maps, but the FWC-FWRI map shows a greater extent of low relief hard bottom features than was predicted in our habitat maps. The areas predicted as low relief hard-bottom by FWC-FWRI often coincide with areas of higher uncertainty in the supervised map of geologic habitat from this study, but even when compared with ground-truth points from the towed video rather than predictions, the low relief hard bottom in FWC-FWRI’s map still corresponds to what was identified as sand in the video 73% of the time. The higher uncertainty might be a result of the presence of mixed habitats, differing morphology of hard-bottom, or the presence of sand intermixed with gravel or debris. More ground-truth samples should be taken in these areas to increase the confidence of these classifications and resolve discrepancies between the two maps. Data from the towed video system were also used to assess differences in fish communities among habitat types and to calculate habitat-specific densities for each taxa. Fish communities were found to significantly differ between soft and hard bottom habitats as well as among the hard-bottom habitats with different vertical relief (flat hard-bottom vs more steeply sloping areas). Additionally, significant differences were found between the fish communities in habitats with attached fauna such as sponges and gorgonians, and areas without attached fauna; however, attached fauna require rock to attach to and the rock habitats rarely lacked attached fauna, so this difference may just reflect the difference between fish communities in sand and rock habitats without the consideration of vertical relief. Moreover, the species driving the differences in the fish communities were identified. Fish were more likely to be present and assemblages were more species rich in more complex habitats (rockier, higher relief, presence of attached fauna). Habitat specific densities were calculated for each species, and general trends are discussed. Lastly the habitat-specific densities were extrapolated to the total area of habitat type (sand vs rock) as predicted by the supervised geologic habitat map. There is predicted to be approximately 111,000 fish (95% CI [67015, 169405]) within the study area based on this method, with ~47,000 (~43%) predicted to be within the sand habitat and ~64,000 (~57%) in the rock habitat. This demonstrates the potential of offshore rocky reefs as “critical habitats” for demersal fish in the offshore environment as rock accounts for just 4% of the study area but is expected to contain over half of the total abundance. The value of sand habitats is also shown, as due to their large area they are able to contribute substantially to the total number of fish despite sustaining comparatively low densities.

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