The evolutionary arms race underwater means many
marine organisms have adapted to depend on coral reefs
as part of their survival strategy against predators. Take
the butterflyfish -- it traded its formerly slim, armored,
hunter-like body for a squatter, more mobile one that's
better for hiding in coral reef crags.
So says Jennifer Hodge, an evolutionary biologist at
the University of California in Davis. Her research team
collected 351 fossilized butterfly fish, representing 87
different species, and analyzed their physical attributes
alongside their foraging behaviors. They found that the
coral grazers' evolution has left them with smaller, less
sensitive eyes, too. "Our findings constitute the strongest
evidence to date that corals have influenced the evolution
of fish morphology," Hodge says.
Those evolutionary changes may be limiting their
future lifespans on the reefs, according to a study published
in Nature Climate Change by a research team at
Lancaster University in the United Kingdom. After
spending 600 hours observing butterflyfish, they
observed that their aggressive behavior had decreased
by about two-thirds on reefs where bleaching had killed
off most of the coral. Instead of feeding on a wide range
of corals, their diet was more limited because they were
no longer accustomed to foraging far from home.
"This matters because butterflyfishes are often seen
as the 'canaries of the reef' due to their strong reliance
on coral," says Nathan Sanders, an ecologist at the
University of Vermont. "They are often the first to suffer
after a disturbance event."
The Lancaster University team opines that monitoring
butterflyfish behavior might provide scientists with
an early warning system for preventing more declines of
coral reefs and their inhabitants.