Sd. Connell, EXCLUSION OF PREDATORY FISH ON A CORAL-REEF - THE ANTICIPATION, PREEMPTION AND EVALUATION OF SOME CAGING ARTIFACTS, Journal of experimental marine biology and ecology, 213(2), 1997, pp. 181-198
The use of cages as a technique to understand the dynamics of reef fis
h has often been treated with suspicion. Cages may cause artefacts, wh
ich cage controls may not always detect, possibly confounding the resu
lt (exclusion of predators) and secondary outcomes associated with the
cage (such as altered algal growth). This study was concerned with th
e minimisation and evaluation of artefacts associated with cages used
to exclude large predatory fish on a coral reef. The manipulations wer
e specifically designed to avoid major artefacts that have previously
confounded the effects of excluding fish from hard substrata: (i) abno
rmally high algal growth due to exclusion of large herbivorous fishes;
(ii) abnormally high sedimentation due to changes in hydrodynamics; (
iii) confusing the experimental effects with local scale patchiness of
predators. For cases in which major artefacts could not be minimised
or eliminated from the experimental design, controls were augmented wi
th additional data to determine the importance of these artefacts. Spe
cial attention was given to assessing the importance of the differenti
al attraction of the treatments to fish. Observational data indicated
that the abundance of large predatory fish was unaffected by partial c
ages (control) and hence predation pressure between open plots and par
tial cages were commensurable. Observational data also indicated that
the encounter rates of prey with predators that could pass through the
mesh was even among all treatments. I concluded that caging artefacts
were minimal and that experimental effects of excluding large predato
ry fish could be interpreted realistically. These results demonstrate
that caging is not an inherently flawed technique, but its use require
s careful planning and evaluation of artefacts that could confound int
erpretation of the treatments. (C) 1997 Elsevier Science B.V.