SEAFDEC/AQDINSTITUTIONAL REPOSITORY
    • English
    • 日本語
    • ไทย
    • Bahasa Indonesia
  • English 
    • English
    • 日本語
    • ไทย
    • Bahasa Indonesia
  • Login
View Item 
  •   SEAFDEC/AQD Institutional Repository Home
  • 02 SEAFDEC/AQD Collaborative Publications
  • SEAFDEC/AQD-Department of Agriculture (DA) - Philippines
  • Bureau of Agricultural Research (BAR)
  • Fisheries Sector Program (FSP)
  • Research Output of the Fisheries Sector Program: Volume 2. Reports on Fisheries and Aquaculture
  • View Item
  •   SEAFDEC/AQD Institutional Repository Home
  • 02 SEAFDEC/AQD Collaborative Publications
  • SEAFDEC/AQD-Department of Agriculture (DA) - Philippines
  • Bureau of Agricultural Research (BAR)
  • Fisheries Sector Program (FSP)
  • Research Output of the Fisheries Sector Program: Volume 2. Reports on Fisheries and Aquaculture
  • View Item
JavaScript is disabled for your browser. Some features of this site may not work without it.

Changes in the fish diversity and abundance on a heavily fished fringing reef on Santiago Island, Pangasinan, Philippines

  • Global styles
  • MLA
  • Vancouver
  • Elsevier - Harvard
  • APA
  • Help
Thumbnail
View/Open
Date
2007
Author
McManus, John W.
Nañola Jr., Cleto L.
Reyes Jr., Rodolfo B.
Kesner, Kathleen N.
Page views
2,555
ASFA keyword
biodiversity ASFA
overfishing ASFA
ecological associations ASFA
species diversity ASFA
abundance ASFA
anthropogenic changes ASFA
coral reef conservation ASFA
nature conservation ASFA
fringing reefs ASFA
reefs ASFA
sea grass ASFA
AGROVOC keyword
Cheilinus trilobatus AGROVOC
Naso lituratus AGROVOC
Philippines AGROVOC
Acanthuridae AGROVOC
Sargassum AGROVOC
Taxonomic term
Acanthurus nigricauda GBIF
Metadata
Show full item record

Share 
 
Abstract
Fish assemblages on the reef slope, reef flat, and seagrass beds on Santiago Island were sampled over 18 months in 1992-1993 as part of a 6-year reef monitoring project started in 1986. Abundance and species diversity were analyzed by a variety of indices, and by multi-dimensional scaling and correlated ordered similarity matrix. The monitoring showed a distinct shift in the reef slope fish composition during the first half of 1988. Of the 100 most abundant species, 21 species showed significant reductions in abundance, and 20 species showed significant increases. Differences were not due to depth preference or feeding habits. Fishing pressure was apparently responsible for declines in Cheilinus trilobatus, Acanthurus nigricauda, and Naso literatus, as well as a general decline in the family Acanthuridae (surgeonfishes). However, analysis of site preferences of the decreasing species and the increasing species indicated a shift in community composition from those species preferring more coral cover to those preferring more sand, rock, and possibly Sargassum seaweed. Site preferences were determined from benthic life form transects done in 1992. Of 35 significantly changing species for which habitat data was obtained, 24 fit the hypothesis of habitat change. This supports the proposition from previous studies that the major cause of change in the reef slope fish community was the destructive fishing activity associated with Malthusian overfishing. Similar analyses of the fish assemblages on the reef flat and on the seagrass beds showed seasonal effects, particularly in the latter, but no strong shift comparable to that of the reef slope. These latter areas had been subjected to greater fishing pressure for a longer period.

Reef fish populations such as those in Bolinao tend to be highly resilient provided the larval supply is not adversely affected. However, subtle changes in the cover of coral on a reef can lead to major changes in the composition of the fish community. Coral cover is being widely diminished on Philippine reefs, and substantial changes in the fish communities may be anticipated, even on reefs with initially low coral cover. These changes may affect the utility and immediate value of the fish to local fishers and the market systems they supply. It is of great urgency to stop destructive fishing practices such as blasting and use of cyanide, and to develop anchoring methods that are minimally destructive.

There is a strong predictive relation between the numbers of fish (abundance) in an area and the numbers of species (biodiversity) they include. As fish populations decline due to destructive fishing, or highly concentrated non-destructive fishing, the local species richness may be expected to decline. This decline may have serious short-term social and economic consequences, as well as far-reaching long-term environmental effects. Efforts to reduce overfishing must be intensified—though reduction of birth rate, provision of alternative livelihoods, and curbing of destructive fishing — in order to prevent a very distressing future for the Philippine marine environment and the people it supports.
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/10862/3259
Suggested Citation
McManus, J. W., Nañola Jr., C. L., Reyes Jr., R. B., & Kesner, K. N. (2008). Changes in the fish diversity and abundance on a heavily fished fringing reef on Santiago Island, Pangasinan, Philippines. In T. U. Bagarinao (Ed.), Research Output of the Fisheries Sector Program (Vol. 2. Reports on Fisheries and Aquaculture, pp. 1-20). Quezon City, Philippines: Bureau of Agricultural Research, Department of Agriculture.
Type
Book chapter
ISBN
9718511776
Collections
  • Research Output of the Fisheries Sector Program: Volume 2. Reports on Fisheries and Aquaculture [32]

Related items

Showing items related by title, author, creator and subject.

  • Thumbnail

    The coral reefs of Mararison 

    Garcia, Luis Maria ORCID; Marte, Clarissa; Agbayani, Renato F. (Aquaculture Department, Southeast Asian Fisheries Development Center, 1998)
  • Thumbnail

    Artificial reefs can do more harm than good 

    Carreon-Lagoc, Julia; Southeast Asian Fisheries Development Center, Aquaculture Department (Aquaculture Department, Southeast Asian Fisheries Development Center, 1990)
  • Thumbnail

    Why artificial reefs? 

    Carreon-Lagoc, Julia; Southeast Asian Fisheries Development Center, Aquaculture Department (Aquaculture Department, Southeast Asian Fisheries Development Center, 1991)

© SEAFDEC/AQD  2025
Send Feedback | Subscribe
 

 

Browse

All of SAIRCommunities & CollectionsBy Issue DateAuthorsTitlesSubjectsThis CollectionBy Issue DateAuthorsTitlesSubjects

My Account

LoginRegister

Statistics

View Usage Statistics

© SEAFDEC/AQD  2025
Send Feedback | Subscribe
 

 

Export citations

Export the current results of the search query as a citation list. Select one of the available citation styles, or add a new one using the "Citations format" option present in the "My account" section.

The list of citations that can be exported is limited to items.

Export citations

Export the current item as a citation. Select one of the available citation styles, or add a new one using the "Citations format" option present in the "My account" section.

Export Citations

DOCUMENT REQUEST NOT AVAILABLE

This publication is still available (in PRINT) and for sale at AQD bookstore. The library is currently restricted to send PDF of publications that are still for sale.

You may contact bookstore@seafdec.org.ph or visit AQD bookstore for orders.

FILE UNDER EMBARGO

This file associated with this publication is currently under embargo. This will be available for download after the embargo date.