Tropical fish usually found at Ningaloo Reef move south to feed on kelp forests
very interesting article below , makes you wonder how this will affect other species and its southwards effect over time
hezzy
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Tropical fish usually found at Ningaloo Reef move south to feed on kelp forests
A major climatic event has caused tropical fish that are usually found off Western Australia's Ningaloo Reef to swim south to tackle seaweed forests off the Mid West coast, marine scientists say.
The fish are in such numbers and eating the kelp with a voracity not seen before anywhere else in the world.
A team of researchers from the University of Western Australia's Oceans Institute has been studying the effects of a marine heatwave in 2011 on the temperate water ecosystem off Port Gregory.
"This is really quite novel globally," Scott Bennett said.
"Never have we seen to this scale fishes just overgraze the seaweed forests like this so this is quite unique."
The researchers translocated some kelp to a reef off Port Gregory during the study and then filmed how the fish responded.
They're now just grazing flat out on the reefs around Port Gregory and they're stopping any kelp recovery so we're seeing complete loss of kelp forests.
Mr Bennett said the kelp was consumed within hours and at a rate that was on average three times higher than had previously been observed around the world.
He said there were a couple of factors contributing to the high numbers of typically tropical fish species being found further down the WA coast and the devastation to the kelp.
"Ever since 2011, when we had a really warm summer and marine heatwave off the Western Australian coast, we found that the kelps have disappeared from quite a few reefs around Port Gregory," he said.
"At the same time as that we've had a lot of tropical fishes that eat seaweed come down the coast by the strong Leeuwin current.
"They're now just grazing flat out on the reefs around Port Gregory and they're stopping any kelp recovery so we're seeing complete loss of kelp forests."
Mr Bennett said the research is showing how extreme climatic events can effect marine ecosystems.
"The warming on its own, the kelp could possibly have recovered but the combination of the warming and the interaction between the kelp and the tropical fish from completely different ecosystems means we've got a fundamental shift in the nature of these ecosystems and it's really difficult for them to recover now," he said.
The UWA research has been tracking the interactions between the fish and the kelp for a number of years to monitor recovery and changes in the fish.
"Over the past three years we've had a really warm phase, each summer since 2011 has been some of the warmest on record," he said.
"Now that's sort of swinging back and we're going into a bit of a cooler phase and the El Nino cycle begins again and we'll see if this gives an opportunity for the kelp to recover.
"At the moment as long as those fish stick around, it looks like it'll be quite difficult for the kelp forests."
http://www.abc.net.au/news/2015-06-08/tropical-fish-move-south-to-feed-on-kelp-forests/6530276
OFW 11
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sammy85
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GT fishing at the 3 mile
GT fishing at the 3 mile
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dano83
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Date Joined: 25/05/12
Whilst very interesting I
Whilst very interesting I bet This sort of stuff has been probably happening for hundreds and thousands of years, evolution still exists
we have only been around a while, and we are only just scratching the surface on what happens under the oceans. There's probably a lot we don't know about
Red Dog
Posts: 311
Date Joined: 13/12/12
Don't mean to hijack your
Don't mean to hijack your thread hezzy but it's along similar lines - saw this article the other day about a Dolphinfish being caught off Albany
www.fishingworld.com.au/news/weird-catch-dolphinfish-albany-wa
Paul H
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Date Joined: 18/01/07
Been getting dolphinfish at
Been getting dolphinfish at times here in SA (often caught at the cabbage patch off Port Lincoln) so wouldn't see it as that weird to see them south.
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Subaquatic
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We all get lost once in a
We all get lost once in a while dont we?
I once met a cocky from Mullewa whilst on holidays in Canada....he wasnt there because of climate change!
ranmar850
Posts: 2702
Date Joined: 12/08/12
Sailfish off Tasmania
Some would jump on this as "evidence" of global warming--but if you look back at the records the japanese longliners keep, they 've been there as long as records have been kept.
But things have doubtless been changing, and long before this decade. There was a marine heatwave, localised, off the coast north of Kalbarri in the late 90's (98?) 28 degree water temps in April, crays were dying in the tanks of the blokes who were camping out. Tropical species definitely became more prevalent after that, and didn't leave.
They didn't mention what species were eating the kelp? Ecosystems are very resilient if left to sort themselves out, unless pushed too far.That's what evolution is all about--I personally feel that the human race is behaving in a very conceited manner about this, thinking they can preserve everything exactly as it is, without change, forever. All the evidence would point to otherwise. We are in love with our own cleverness, but the planet were are meant to be "saving" will be here eons after we have gone, just a footnote on the big scale of things.
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Simmo
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Date Joined: 26/05/06
A lot of this will be down
A lot of this will be down to the El Nino/La Nina cycle. 2011 and 2012 were freak La Nina events.