Td. Johnson et al., FISH PRODUCTION AND HABITAT UTILIZATION ON A SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA ARTIFICIAL REEF, Bulletin of marine science, 55(2-3), 1994, pp. 709-723
The feeding habits of fish, their production, and their fidelity to th
e reef habitat were estimated on and near Torrey Pines Artificial Reef
(TPAR) during April-October 1989. Taxonomic and biomass analysis of g
ut contents and benthic resources suggested that at least 70% of the d
iet of reef fish was derived from the reef itself and another 20-25% f
rom the ecotone. For most reef fishes, suitable prey was 100 times mor
e abundant in the reef habitat than in adjacent sand habitats. Estimat
es of somatic production by tagged fish were based on standing stocks,
size distribution, and growth rates, and by untagged species, on chan
ges in mean length of a cohort or population biomass over time. Estima
ted total production of the fish on TPAR was 116 kg, or 649 kg.ha(-1),
more than a third of it as gonadal production by the six target speci
es. Production by the sand-bottom fish assemblage, estimated from lite
rature-derived somatic and gonadal production rates and the biomass of
trawled fish, was 73 kg hectare year(-1). Calculated reef production
was, therefore, about nine times greater than the production of sand-b
ottom fish. From 30 to 70% of the four species of tagged fish (sheephe
ad, rock wrasse, black perch, and garibaldi) that could be captured by
divers were recaptured after 7 months, indicating a high degree of fi
delity to the reef. Recapture of 12% of tagged kelp bass via hook-and-
line after 7 months and the recapture of five tagged kelp bass of a to
tal of 40 kelp bass caught 1 year later by a sport fishing boat indica
te that kelp bass, too, remained associated with the reef for long per
iods.