Assessment of Temporal Variation of Fish Assemblages between Natural and Artificial Reefs
Date
2021-06Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Well-defined coral reefs and patches with high density of fishes were reported 
in the Arabian Gulf. Due to environmental and anthropogenic disturbances, especially 
due to coastal development, coral reef cover starts to decline, and conservation efforts 
were established to restore these systems which is consider as a habitat for about 25% 
of all marine species. Deployment of artificial reefs was one of the proposed 
approaches. In this study, temporal variation of fish abundance, diversity and biomass 
were investigated in three sites which included live, dead, and artificial reef sites. The 
effectiveness of two survey methods (BRUV and UVC) was assessed. Artificial reefs
recorded the lowest fish species richness with only 13 taxa., while live coral site was 
the highest with 21 taxa recorded. However, this was associated with low abundance 
and relatively lower frequency of these species. The dead reef site had a lower species 
richness, with only 14 species recorded. The interaction of time and site variation was 
significant in the study at the artificial reef site only. Artificial reefs could expectance 
a rapid increase in fish abundance however this could come on the expenses of the 
community structure, the method variation was significant. The study showed UVC 
methodology has a significant and relevant advantage over BRUVs by providing 
estimates of the absolute abundances
DOI/handle
http://hdl.handle.net/10576/21608Collections
- Biological & Environmental Sciences [111 items ]
 


