Today we did our first experiment out on the reef. After breakfast, we got together and designed the experiment. First, we formulated our question by brainstorming the things we had been curious about from our previous day out on the reef. We settled on parrotfish partially because we had been seeing a lot of them and partially because they seem particularly interesting. We decided to do fish follow surveys in which we pick an individual and observe them for a period of time, recording what they do in that interval. We were looking at their eating habits in particular, which are a bit hard to pin down. We ended up deciding to watch the fish for a total of 45 minutes, following individuals for five minutes at a time. Our first location in the morning was the patch reef and sea grass beds just off the docks, and in the afternoon we looked at patch reefs further out.
With our experimental designed, we had to pick our subjects to narrow down our focus. We opted to look at four species in particular and divided them up among the different groups. My group was looking at their redtail parrotfish, which we understood predominantly ate sea grass. We set out, staked out the sea grass beds by the dock, and started our time. We had trouble finding parrotfish close to the dock, so we kept swimming further out. As we got further from the dock (and closer to the reef), we started seeing more parrotfish, but not the ones we were looking for. We primarily saw striped parrotfish
In order to have replicates, in the afternoon, we went on the boat to a new patch reef. As an aside, we learned today that Glover’s has over 900 patch reefs, so I ill be saying ‘we visited a new patch reef’ quite a lot. We visited two patch reefs and they both seemed even more vibrant than the reef by the dock at Glover’s. We saw plenty more striped parrotfish in decently sized schools and were also able to see some of the redtail parrotfish as well. They seemed more concentrated on the margin of the reef, but they definitely were eating the sea grass. We also saw a fair number predatory fish, including a handful of barracudas. I think we started to see more species once we figured out not to swim so aggressively and instead to sort fo drift. We weren’t seeing the redtail parrotfish before because they were so skittish, but once we started drifting we saw all kinds of fish. I was also fairly impressed by the massive conchs.
In the evening, we were treated to presentations by representatives from the Wildlife Conservation Society, the Belizean fisheries service, and the coast guard, all of which operate out of this island. We learned about what each group does on the island and how the protected area is maintained. It was a nice compliment to the similar presentation we had at Las Cuevas. That might be one of the most valuable aspects of this trip, to me—learning all about how research stations operate and what researchers do there.
Overall, a hugely successful day! We’ll start tomorrow with data analysis and poster making from our fish follow surveys, and then move on to more activities. Apparently we’re not doing as much snorkeling tomorrow, but I’m excited to see what activities are in store on land.
