Unsupported Browser Detected

Internet Explorer lacks support for the features of this website. For the best experience, please use a modern browser such as Chrome, Firefox, or Edge.

Natural Variation in Coral Reef Trophic Structure

December 09, 2019

Using a combination of small‐ and large‐scale surveys, we consider how fishing alters the trophic structure among coral reef fish by assessing those impacts to understand how and why that structure varies naturally across scales.

Policies designed to address current challenges to the sustainability of fisheries generally use an ecosystem‐based approach – one that incorporates interactions between fishes, fishers, and the environment.

Fishing alters the trophic structure among coral reef fish but properly assessing those impacts requires an understanding of how and why that structure varies naturally across scales.

Using a combination of small‐ and large‐scale surveys, we generated biomass pyramids for 20 uninhabited Pacific islands, and found:

1) The distribution of reef fish biomass across trophic levels is highly scale dependent: trophic structures that appear top‐heavy at small scales can take a variety of different states when data are integrated across the broader seascape.

2) Reefs can have the greatest biomass at intermediate consumer levels, which we describe as “middle‐driven” systems.

3) In unfished coral reef systems, trophic structure is strongly predicted by energy into the base and middle of the food web, as well as by the interacting effect of water temperature.


Heenan A, Williams GJ, Williams ID. 2019. Natural variation in coral reef trophic structure across environmental gradients. Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment.  https://doi.org/10.1002/fee.2144.

Last updated by Pacific Islands Fisheries Science Center on 12/03/2021