With coral cover in decline on many Caribbean reefs, any process of coral mortality is of potential concern. While sparisomid
parrotfishes are major grazers of Caribbean reefs and help control algal blooms, the fact that they also undertake corallivory
has prompted some to question the rationale for their conservation. Here the weight of evidence for beneficial effects of
parrotfishes, in terms of reducing algal cover and facilitating demographic processes in corals, and the deleterious effects
of parrotfishes in terms of causing coral mortality and chronic stress, are reviewed. While elevated parrotfish density will
likely increase the predation rate upon juvenile corals, the net effect appears to be positive in enhancing coral recruitment
through removal of macroalgal competitors. Parrotfish corallivory can cause modest partial colony mortality in the most intensively
grazed species of
Montastraea but the generation and healing of bite scars appear to be in near equilibrium, even when coral cover is low. Whole colony
mortality in adult corals can lead to complete exclusion of some delicate, lagoonal species of
Porites from forereef environments but is only reported for one reef species (
Porites astreoides), for one habitat (backreef), and with uncertain incidence (though likely <<10%). No deleterious effects of predation on
coral growth or fecundity have been reported, though recovery of zooxanthellae after bleaching events may be retarded. The
balance of evidence to date finds strong support for the herbivory role of parrotfishes in facilitating coral recruitment,
growth, and fecundity. In contrast, no net deleterious effects of corallivory have been reported for reef corals. Corallivory
is unlikely to constrain overall coral cover but contraints upon dwindling populations of the
Montastraea annularis species complex are feasible and the role of parrotfishes as a vector of coral disease requires evaluation. However, any
assertion that conservation practices should guard against protecting corallivorous parrotfishes appears to be unwarranted
at this stage.
Keywords Conservation - Mortality - Coral - Herbivore
Communicated by Biology Editor Dr. Philip Munday