language-iconOld Web
English
Sign In

The Chagos Archipelago

2019
The Chagos Archipelago, located in the central Indian Ocean and officially known as the British Indian Ocean Territory, contains some of the most remote reefsin the Indian Ocean. The Chagos Archipelagois comprised of a series of atolls, including the largest atollin the world, the Great Chagos Bank. Records from surveys of mesophotic coralecosystems (MCEs; reefs30–150 m depth) in Chagos stretch back to 1905, with more extensive work conducted in the 1970s and post-2010. Coraland fish communities vary considerably with depth and among habitat types. Coralcover generally declines with increased depth across the shallow reefto MCE depth gradient, though in several locations close to 100% scleractinian coralcover has been observed on MCEs. Consistent with earlier studies, we identify five coralspecies as indicative of Chagos MCEs. Recently collected fish community data are analyzed to illustrate, for the first time, patterns in reeffish species richness, abundance, biomass, and trophic groups across a shallow to upper-MCE depth gradient (0–60 m). Fish species richness, abundance, and biomass declined with increased depth, while richness, abundance, and trophic group patterns were also influenced by habitat type (seaward versus lagoonal reef). To date, the vast majority of MCE research in Chagos has focused on upper mesophotic depths. We recommend future work consider the full MCE depth range within the Chagos Archipelago.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    55
    References
    7
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []
    Baidu
    map