A sex-changing fish called California sheephead (Semicossyphus pulcher)
plays a vital role in the food web of kelp forests along the Pacific
coast. Commonly found in the waters from Baja California to Point
Conception -- although they can sometimes be found as far north as
Monterey Bay -- sheephead feed on sea urchins, whose grazing habits can
wreak havoc on community composition in kelp forests.
A new study by UC Santa Barbara research biologist Jenn Caselle uses
data from three decades of research to document differential
exploitation and recovery of sheephead populations in the Santa Barbara
Channel in response to marine reserves and fishing regulations. Her
research on sheephead appears today in the Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences.
"It's a really iconic species in our local kelp forests and it's
fascinating because it's big, it's beautiful and it changes sex,"
Caselle said. Born female, sheephead morph into males at various stages
in the lifecycle as determined by environmental conditions and
pressures. "There's a lot going on with this species, and its effect on
the kelp forest food web is essential," she added
Caselle and lead author Scott Hamilton, previously a postdoctoral
researcher at UCSB and now a faculty member at Moss Landing Marine
Laboratories near Monterey, show that as sheephead increase in size --
particularly when they surpass the minimum size limit of the fishery --
they are able to eat bigger urchins, and more of them, as revealed by
analysis of their gut content.
"That's probably because large sheephead can physically handle the
urchins," Caselle said. "We call it gape size, meaning their mouth is
big enough to get around them."
The researchers began their work in 2007 by investigating sheephead
population dynamics and life histories in response to fishing pressure.
They also have done studies on species' movements and whether marine
protected areas could help sheephead recover from overfishing.
The current paper combines previous findings with new work using
visual surveys and path analysis to quantify the direct and indirect
effects of sheephead on sea urchins and macroalgal assemblages. The
research illustrates the context-dependent ecological role of sheephead
in Southern California kelp forests. When predators such as sheephead
are fished, not only does abundance diminish, Caselle noted, but size
structure is also reduced because fisheries usually target bigger
individuals.
"The main point of our work is not necessarily about fishing reducing
abundance; it's about how fishing reduces size structure," she said.
"If you have a species whose predation rate depends on that size, you
can have strong trophic effects without even thinking about abundance
changes."
The way in which fishing alters size-structured food web interactions
has implications for the structure and function of kelp forest
ecosystems. "Our argument emphasizes that management strategies
protecting large sheephead -- such as marine reserves or increases in
the minimum size limit -- may help alleviate overgrazing in temperate
kelp forest systems," Caselle concluded.
"The reduction in size structure can have important effects on prey
structure as well, apart from reductions in numbers," she added.
"Sheephead are very important players in the kelp forest. By keeping
urchins in check, they maintain healthy kelp, which in turn provides
habitat for many, many other species."
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