Dataset: Persistence of E. lori settlers on sponge habitat in South Water Caye, Belize during 2015.

Final no updates expectedDOI: 10.1575/1912/bco-dmo.728458.1Version 1 (2018-02-28)Dataset Type:Other Field Results

Principal Investigator: Peter Buston (Boston University)

Co-Principal Investigator, Contact: John Majoris (Boston University)

BCO-DMO Data Manager: Hannah Ake (Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution)


Project: Collaborative Research: The Role of Larval Orientation Behavior in Determining Population Connectivity (Elacatinus Dispersal II)


Abstract

Persistence of E. lori settlers on sponge habitat in South Water Caye, Belize during 2015.

Persistence of E. lori settlers seeded onto 120 tagged tubes sponges on the fore reef off South Water Caye.

These data were included in Figure 6 and Table 3 of:

Majoris, JE; D'Aloia CC, Francis RK, Buston PM (Accepted) Differential persistence favors habitat preferences that determine the distribution of a reef fish. Behav. Ecol.


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Results

Majoris, J. E., D’Aloia, C. C., Francis, R. K., & Buston, P. M. (2018). Differential persistence favors habitat preferences that determine the distribution of a reef fish. Behavioral Ecology, 29(2), 429–439. doi:10.1093/beheco/arx189