The Behavioral mechanism of Damselfish Algal Farming and its Ecological Effects on Coral Reef Ecosystems

Authors

  • Hanke Chen Author

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.61173/n0b9fh03

Keywords:

Interspecific in-teraction, Farming mutualism, Coral reef conservation, Damselfish, Algal farming

Abstract

Coral reefs are one of the most diverse and productive ecosystems, and their biodiversity and ecological stability are very important. Within coral reef ecosystems, the algalfarming damselfishes are some damselfish species that have a unique territorial behavior of cultivating algal farms. Current studies on the behavioral mechanism of damselfish algal farming and its ecological impacts on coral reef ecosystems are summarized in this review. It focuses on the interactions, farming practices, and territorial strategies of algal-farming damselfishes. Algal-farming damselfish have been shown to manage their algal farms through selective weeding, which alters the reef’s benthic composition, defending against invaders like urchins, and promoting their preferred algae. Recent research notes that environmental stressors like coral bleaching and ocean acidification may increase the disruption of damselfish algal farms on the coral-algae balance in favor of algae dominance. Government organizations can develop more effective coral reef conservation plans by using the species as an indicator of ecosystem health, and understanding how damselfish algal farming operates is crucial for predicting reef development trends in the context of climate change.

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Published

2025-12-19

Issue

Section

Articles