Project: Collaborative Research: Habitat fragmentation effects on fish diversity at landscape scales: experimental tests of multiple mechanisms

Acronym/Short Name:Habitat Fragmentation
Project Duration:2016-09 - 2019-08
Geolocation:North Carolina

Description

Amount and quality of habitat is thought to be of fundamental importance to maintaining coastal marine ecosystems. This research will use large-scale field experiments to help understand how and why fish populations respond to fragmentation of seagrass habitats. The question is complex because increased fragmentation in seagrass beds decreases the amount and also the configuration of the habitat (one patch splits into many, patches become further apart, the amount of edge increases, etc). Previous work by the investigators in natural seagrass meadows provided evidence that fragmentation interacts with amount of habitat to influence the community dynamics of fishes in coastal marine landscapes. Specifically, fragmentation had no effect when the habitat was large, but had a negative effect when habitat was smaller. In this study, the investigators will build artificial seagrass habitat to use in a series of manipulative field experiments at an ambitious scale. The results will provide new, more specific information about how coastal fish community dynamics are affected by changes in overall amount and fragmentation of seagrass habitat, in concert with factors such as disturbance, larval dispersal, and wave energy. The project will support two early-career investigators, inform habitat conservation strategies for coastal management, and provide training opportunities for graduate and undergraduate students. The investigators plan to target students from underrepresented groups for the research opportunities.

Building on previous research in seagrass environments, this research will conduct a series of field experiments approach at novel, yet relevant scales, to test how habitat area and fragmentation affect fish diversity and productivity. Specifically, 15 by 15-m seagrass beds will be created using artificial seagrass units (ASUs) that control for within-patch-level (~1-10 m2) factors such as shoot density and length. The investigators will employ ASUs to manipulate total habitat area and the degree of fragmentation within seagrass beds in a temperate estuary in North Carolina. In year one, response of the fishes that colonize these landscapes will be measured as abundance, biomass, community structure, as well as taxonomic and functional diversity. Targeted ASU removals will then follow to determine species-specific responses to habitat disturbance. In year two, the landscape array and sampling regime will be doubled, and half of the landscapes will be seeded with post-larval fish of low dispersal ability to test whether pre- or post-recruitment processes drive landscape-scale patterns. In year three, the role of wave exposure (a natural driver of seagrass fragmentation) in mediating fish community response to landscape configuration will be tested by deploying ASU meadows across low and high energy environments.


DatasetLatest Version DateCurrent State
Data from minnow traps placed across landscape fragmentation per se treatments in June, July, and August 2019 in Back Sound, NC to accompany scallop density surveys2024-10-11Final no updates expected
Data from minnow traps deployed to accompany scallop survival assays conducted as part of a larger concurrent study with Artificial Seagrass Units (ASU) in NC from July to September 20182024-10-11Final no updates expected
Canopy height and epiphyte biomass of artificial seagrass landscapes in June, July, and August 2019 in Back Sound, NC2024-10-10Final no updates expected
Data from scallop survival assays conducted as part of a larger concurrent study of fragmentation effects on estuarine faunal communities with Artificial Seagrass Units (ASU) in Back Sound, NC from July to September 20182024-10-04Final no updates expected
Scallop density survey data across landscape fragmentation per se treatments in June, July, and August 2019 in Back Sound, NC2024-10-04Final no updates expected
Landscape parameters of seagrass, fish and macroinvertebrate communities within Artificial Seagrass Units (ASU) in Back Sound, NC from July to September 20182023-03-27Final no updates expected
Settlement rates of fishes and crab megalopa within Artificial Seagrass Units (ASU) in Back Sound, NC from June to August 20182023-03-20Final no updates expected
Landscape fine-scale complexity of seagrass, fish and macroinvertebrate communities within Artificial Seagrass Units (ASU) in Back Sound, NC from July to September 20182023-03-17Final no updates expected
Epibenthic faunal densities sampled from within Artificial Seagrass Units (ASU) in Back Sound, NC from June to October 20182023-03-15Final no updates expected
Squidpop consumption probability within Artificial Seagrass Units (ASU) in Back Sound, NC from October to November 20182023-03-15Final no updates expected
Fish densities sampled by Dual Frequency Identification Sonar (DIDSON) within Artificial Seagrass Units (ASU) in Back Sound, NC from June to October 20182023-03-13Final no updates expected
Fish measurements sampled by Dual Frequency Identification Sonar (DIDSON) within Artificial Seagrass Units (ASU) in Back Sound, NC from July to September 20182023-03-10Final no updates expected
Log response ratios to seagrass edge and fragmentation effects from peer-reviewed literature2021-12-01Final no updates expected
Collections of fish and invertebrates settled in artificial seagrass landscapes2019-12-23Final no updates expected
Relative depredation (binomial) data from a squidpop tethering experiment in summer 2017 in Back Sound, North Carolina2019-11-06Final no updates expected
Fauna species count data from minnow trap sampling within seagrass in Summer 2017 in Back Sound, North Carolina2019-11-06Final no updates expected
Trait data for epibenthic and infaunal seagrass macrofauna in North Carolina, USA from peer-reviewed literature and web-based identification guides2019-06-18Final no updates expected
Seagrass (Zostera marina and Halodule wrightii) shoot count, biomass and shoot height from seagrass bed core samples collected in Back Sound, North Carolina in June and July of 20132019-06-18Final no updates expected
Relative crab mortality (binomial) data from a tethering experiment in summer 2017 in Back Sound, North Carolina2019-02-11Final no updates expected
Infauna biomass from seagrass bed core samples collected in Back Sound, North Carolina in June and July of 20132018-06-18Final no updates expected
Infauna abundance from seagrass bed core samples collected in Back Sound, North Carolina in June and July of 20132018-06-18Final no updates expected
Zostera marina and Halodule wrightii shoot counts from quadrats and Zostera marina seed counts from sediment cores in Back Sound, North Carolina between May and July of 20142018-04-24Final no updates expected
Relative predation intensity within temperate seagrass habitat during June 2015 (Habitat_Fragmentation project)2017-08-29Final no updates expected

People

Lead Principal Investigator: F. Joel Fodrie
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill (UNC-Chapel Hill-IMS)

Principal Investigator: Lauren Yeager
University of Texas - Marine Science Institute (UTMSI)

Contact: F. Joel Fodrie
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill (UNC-Chapel Hill-IMS)


Data Management Plan

DMP_Fodrie_Yeager_OCE-1635950_1661683.pdf (66.33 KB)
08/28/2017