Previous work out of the Witman lab has looked at how sea urchin diversity affects processes like grazing rates in the Galapagos. Now the focus is shifting higher up the food chain to the things that eat sea urchins. More specifically, does the diversity of urchin predators affect the intensity of predation on urchins? Are there interactions between the different urchin predators that may alter predation rates? My own project aims to figure out to what extent seastars such as Pentaceraster are a part of this predation. The other obvious suspects would be predatory fishes.
To get some preliminary data on the diversity of fishes (with a special interest in species that could potentially eat urchins), we've been deploying a bunch of Hero GoPro cameras at multiple sites around the central Galapagos archipelago to record 3-4 hours of continuous video data on the fish that are present. These little wearable cameras were originally made for filming high-definition extreme sports videos, but work extremely well as our underwater data-collectors - we've made little stands for them that weight them down on the rock (usually we also stick a few rocks on the stand for greater stability).
During our 5-day research cruise, we collected fish diversity data from 11 different sites, deploying 2 cameras per site for a minimum of 1 hour continuous video data per camera. Video data are easy to collect and accumulates quickly, but it will probably take many more hours in the fall and spring to analyse fish diversity from the raw data.
Here is a one of the more exciting excerpts from Rocas Cousins, a site on the north side of Santa Cruz. How many fish species can you spot? (If you're not too distracted by the charismatic trio of ray, sealion and turtle...)
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