Authors
Timothy J Langlois, Marti J Anderson, Russell C Babcock
Publication date
2005/6
Journal
Ecology
Volume
86
Issue
6
Pages
1508-1519
Publisher
Ecological Society of America
Description
Marine reserves provide a large‐scale manipulation of predator densities, which provides a means to investigate the potential effects of predation. The effects of reef‐associated predators were examined in northeastern New Zealand by comparing soft‐sediment assemblages at sites having different densities of large predators. Large rock lobsters (Jasus edwardsii) were 3.8 times more abundant, and large snapper (Pagrus auratus) 12 times more abundant, on average, at reserve sites compared with non‐reserve sites. The overall structure of infaunal communities differed between areas with high predator densities (reserve) and those with lower densities (fished). Sites with consistently higher densities of snapper and lobster were found to have a lower biomass of two bivalve species, and the greatest decreases were found near the reef edge (2–5 m). For several fauna a strong gradient in their density with …
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