[Coral-List] Canthigaster population irruption
Osmar Luiz
osmarluizjr at gmail.com
Mon Sep 16 10:39:06 UTC 2013
Dear Janie,
It may save your time know let then now that this Copeia article is available for download at Ross' publications webpage..
http://www.stri.si.edu/english/scientific_staff/staff_scientist/scientist.php?id=28
Cheers
Osmar
On 18/09/2013, at 12:40 AM, Janie Wulff <wulff at bio.fsu.edu> wrote:
> Following up on Les's comments about mass settlement of tetraodontiform fishes:
>
> Ross Robertson (Robertson, D.R.1998. Copeia 1988(3):698-703)
> published data on a mass settlement in 1985 of the triggerfish
> Balistes vetula in Panama in the contexts of : 1) settlement data in
> 1985 of this species at 81 sites in Panama, Belize, Isla San Andres,
> Santa Marta, and Grand Cayman collected by him, augmented by
> information from responses to questionnaires returned by other
> researchers at 22 localities around the Caribbean, 2) surface current
> patterns in the wider Caribbean, 3) monthly settlement information at
> sites near Punta de San Blas, Panama, for 7 years preceding the mass
> settlement (4 years of non-quantitative observations followed by 3
> years of counts), and for 2 years after the mass settlement, 4)
> settlement during the same time period, at the Punta de San Blas
> sites, of 24 other fish species representing 7 families, 5)
> behavioral observations of settlers wounding each other during
> battles for limited crevice space, and 6) resulting effects on the
> adult populations. I'd be happy to send the pdf to anyone who would
> like to have the article but lacks access to Copeia.
>
> - Janie
>
> At 5:22 PM +0000 9/14/13, Kaufman, Leslie S wrote:
>> Hi all.
>>
>> Part of the old discussion from 2008 was recognition that this kind
>> of event is not uncommon in tetraodontiform fishes (trigger, file,
>> puffer, box, trunk). The most classic expression is the periodic
>> "larval storm" of Pervagor in the Pacific...though the term larval
>> here is not quite correct: many or most tetraodontiform fishes pass
>> through a pelagic juvenile phase, and it is usually these pelagic
>> juveniles that arrive en masse every so often, with many winding up
>> dead in windrows on beaches.
>>
>> Les
>>
>> Les Kaufman
>> Professor of Biology
>> Boston University Marine Program
>> and
>> Marine Conservation Fellow
>> Betty and Gordon Moore Center for Ecosystem Science and Economics
>> Conservation International
>> lesk at bu.edu<mailto:lesk at bu.edu>
>>
>>
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