ENERGETIC EXTREMES IN REEF FISH OCCUPYING HARSH HABITATS

Research output: Contribution to conferenceConference abstract for conferenceResearch

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ENERGETIC EXTREMES IN REEF FISH OCCUPYING HARSH HABITATS. / Steffensen, John Fleng.

2009.

Research output: Contribution to conferenceConference abstract for conferenceResearch

Harvard

Steffensen, JF 2009, 'ENERGETIC EXTREMES IN REEF FISH OCCUPYING HARSH HABITATS'.

APA

Steffensen, J. F. (2009). ENERGETIC EXTREMES IN REEF FISH OCCUPYING HARSH HABITATS.

Vancouver

Steffensen JF. ENERGETIC EXTREMES IN REEF FISH OCCUPYING HARSH HABITATS. 2009.

Author

Steffensen, John Fleng. / ENERGETIC EXTREMES IN REEF FISH OCCUPYING HARSH HABITATS.

Bibtex

@conference{8a5e0bf5a73a431ca16b1e2126a5417b,
title = "ENERGETIC EXTREMES IN REEF FISH OCCUPYING HARSH HABITATS",
abstract = "Christopher Fulton1, John Steffensen2, Jacob Johansen3Indo-Pacific Fish Conference, Fremantle, Western Australia, May 2009 - TalkAbstract: Fish living in harsh habitats often display phenotypic features that allow them to deal with extreme and/or highly variable environmental conditions. We document how relatively small changes in fin morphology has afforded some coral reef fish taxa with exceptional locomotor performance and energetic efficiency, and how this key attribute may have played a key role in the evolution and ecology of several diverse Indo-Pacific reef fish families. Using measurements of oxygen consumption in a portable respirometer, we found that fish taxa with wing-shaped fins display a metabolic scope far beyond that previously recorded for fishes (up to 10 times above resting metabolic rate), allowing them to sustain the high swimming speeds required by their wave-swept environment (up to 1 m s-1) whilst incurring a relatively low energetic cost of transport. Paddle-finned sister taxa, which have slightly more rounded fins and occupy sheltered habitats, displayed similar levels of energetic efficiency, but at swimming speeds less than half that of their wing-finned counterparts. We discuss how such differences in locomotor efficiency are pivotal to the habitat-use of these fishes, and how eco-energetic models may be used to provide new insights into spatial variations in fish demography and ecology among coral reef habitat zones.",
author = "Steffensen, {John Fleng}",
year = "2009",
language = "English",

}

RIS

TY - ABST

T1 - ENERGETIC EXTREMES IN REEF FISH OCCUPYING HARSH HABITATS

AU - Steffensen, John Fleng

PY - 2009

Y1 - 2009

N2 - Christopher Fulton1, John Steffensen2, Jacob Johansen3Indo-Pacific Fish Conference, Fremantle, Western Australia, May 2009 - TalkAbstract: Fish living in harsh habitats often display phenotypic features that allow them to deal with extreme and/or highly variable environmental conditions. We document how relatively small changes in fin morphology has afforded some coral reef fish taxa with exceptional locomotor performance and energetic efficiency, and how this key attribute may have played a key role in the evolution and ecology of several diverse Indo-Pacific reef fish families. Using measurements of oxygen consumption in a portable respirometer, we found that fish taxa with wing-shaped fins display a metabolic scope far beyond that previously recorded for fishes (up to 10 times above resting metabolic rate), allowing them to sustain the high swimming speeds required by their wave-swept environment (up to 1 m s-1) whilst incurring a relatively low energetic cost of transport. Paddle-finned sister taxa, which have slightly more rounded fins and occupy sheltered habitats, displayed similar levels of energetic efficiency, but at swimming speeds less than half that of their wing-finned counterparts. We discuss how such differences in locomotor efficiency are pivotal to the habitat-use of these fishes, and how eco-energetic models may be used to provide new insights into spatial variations in fish demography and ecology among coral reef habitat zones.

AB - Christopher Fulton1, John Steffensen2, Jacob Johansen3Indo-Pacific Fish Conference, Fremantle, Western Australia, May 2009 - TalkAbstract: Fish living in harsh habitats often display phenotypic features that allow them to deal with extreme and/or highly variable environmental conditions. We document how relatively small changes in fin morphology has afforded some coral reef fish taxa with exceptional locomotor performance and energetic efficiency, and how this key attribute may have played a key role in the evolution and ecology of several diverse Indo-Pacific reef fish families. Using measurements of oxygen consumption in a portable respirometer, we found that fish taxa with wing-shaped fins display a metabolic scope far beyond that previously recorded for fishes (up to 10 times above resting metabolic rate), allowing them to sustain the high swimming speeds required by their wave-swept environment (up to 1 m s-1) whilst incurring a relatively low energetic cost of transport. Paddle-finned sister taxa, which have slightly more rounded fins and occupy sheltered habitats, displayed similar levels of energetic efficiency, but at swimming speeds less than half that of their wing-finned counterparts. We discuss how such differences in locomotor efficiency are pivotal to the habitat-use of these fishes, and how eco-energetic models may be used to provide new insights into spatial variations in fish demography and ecology among coral reef habitat zones.

M3 - Conference abstract for conference

ER -

ID: 45042732