THE 10th INDO PACIFIC FISH CONFERENCE

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THE 10th INDO PACIFIC FISH CONFERENCE

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THE 10th INDO-PACIFIC FISH CONFERENCE Book of Abstracts TAHITI - 2-6 October 2017 Table of contents A1/ Evolution and biology of ‘primitive’ and fossil fishes 33 Adaptive radiation of Pelagia (Teleostei: Acanthomorpha) indicated by 3D morphometry, Hermione Beckett [et al.] 34 Awesome variation in genomic organization in polyploid Acipenseriformes, Anna Barmintseva [et al.] 35 Dead fish CSI: Reconstructing the enigmatic Late Cretaceous billfish analogue Protosphyraena (Teleosteomorpha: Pachycormidae), Anthony Maltese 36 Early members of a ‘living fossil’ lineage and a later origin for modern ray-finned fishes, Sam Giles [et al.] 37 Insight on sturgeon phylogeny and biogeography from mitogenomes and NGSbased nuclear loci sequencing., Nikolai Mugue [et al.] 38 Megaplanktivory, Past and Present: A comparison of Jurassic large suspensionfeeders of the IndoPacific with contemporary analogues., Jeff Liston 39 New Data on the Endoskeletal Morphology and Evolution of Early Jawed Fishes, Martin Brazeau [et al.] 40 New marine fish faunas from the middle Eocene (Lutetian) of Pakistan: implications for the origin of the Indo-Pacific fauna, Matt Friedman [et al.] 41 Polyploid evolution and functional genome diploidization in sturgeons, Victor Vasil’ev [et al.] 42 Saber-toothed fossil anchovies (Teleostei: Engrauloidea) from the early-middle Eocene of Belgium and Pakistan, with comments on clupeiform phylogeny and feeding adaptations, Alessio Capobianco [et al.] 43 The Emergence of Modern Marine Fish Faunas after the Jurassic-Cretaceous Crisis, Lauren Sallan [et al.] 45 The evolution of teleost otolith morphology and its applications in paleoichthyology, Werner Schwarzhans [et al.] 46 The features of the Neogene stage of the North Pacific ichthyofauna development as inferred from two fossil fish complexes from Sakhalin, Russia, Mikhail Nazarkin 47 A2/ Genes to Genomes: Forging ahead in the study of marine evolution 48 A high-quality Genome of the Clownfish Amphiprion Percula, Robert Lehmann [et al.] 49 Addressing intractable groups in the Fish Tree of Life using genome-wide Gene Genealogy Interrogation, Ricardo Betancur [et al.] 50 Comparative genomics of anemonefish and chromosome evolution in reef fish, Damien Lightfoot [et al.] 51 Contrasting patterns of population structure and connectivity across northern Australia in a commercially important fish Lutjanus johnii: integrating population genetics, genomics and ecological markers., Laura Taillebois [et al.] 52 Coral Reefs as Stepping Stones in a Range Expansion: The historical Demography of blacktip reef sharks revealed by genomic data, Stefano Mona [et al.] 53 Draft assembly and annotation of A glossodonta and A vulpes genomes, Keoni Kauwe [et al.] 54 Evolutionary history of endemic coral reef fish species of Rapa Nui, Erwan DelrieuTrottin [et al.] 55 Explosive diversification of marine fishes at the Cretaceous-Paleogene boundary, Brant Faircloth [et al.] 56 Finding Evolutionary Links and Genes in Adaptive Radiations of Reef Gobies (Gobiidae) by Targeted Gene Capture, Kendall Johnson [et al.] 58 Genomic Analysis of Disjunct Marine Fish Populations of the Northeastern Pacific and Sea of Cortez, Eric Garcia [et al.] 59 Genomic signatures of parallel selection in surfperches (Embiotocidae), Gary Longo [et al.] 60 Genomics of adaptation in the ocean, Agostinho Antunes 61 Genomics of habitat choice and adaptive evolution in the deep sea, Michelle Gaither [et al.] 62 How the devil ray got its horns: the genetic basis of body plan remodeling in manta rays and their relatives, Karen Crow 63 Hybridisation between sympatric species of coral reef fish, Samuel Payet [et al.] 64 Investigating the genetic basis of clownfish adaptive radiation using comparative genomics, Anna Marcionetti [et al.] 65 Long live the kingfish: patterns and processes of evolution in carangiform fishes, Jessica Glass [et al.] 66 Marine connectivity in time and space: Insights from an intertidal goby, Joshua Thia [et al.] 67 Pathways and perils: Building up genomic resources in a specialized group of reef fish, Joseph Dibattista 68 Population genomics of New Zealand snapper and testing for size-selective fishing using ancient DNA, Peter Ritchie 69 The Future of Phylogenomics, Prosanta Chakrabarty 70 The Genomic Observatories Metadatabase (GeOMe): A new repository for field and sampling event metadata associated with genetic samples, Eric D Crandall [et al.] 71 Through a liquid glass to the eye of the beholder: Visual ecology of coral reef fishes isolated by the Isthmus of Panama, Michele Pierotti [et al.] 72 Time-calibrated Phylogenomic Reconstruction of Batfishes (Lophiiformes: Ogcocephalidae), Cerise Chen 73 Toward resolving complex evolutionary history of the Indo-West Pacific sergeant majors (Pomacentridae: Abudefduf), Wei-Jen Chen 74 Understanding Anti-Tropical Distributions in Centrarchiformes, William Ludt [et al.] 75 A3/ Integrative approaches in understanding fish diversity: Morphology, Systematics, and Taxonomy 76 A review of the genus Sparidentex (Pisces: Perciformes, Sparidae) with a new species from the Indian Ocean, Yukio Iwatsuki [et al.] 77 Balistoid Habitat Use and Swimming Performance: An Evolutionary Perspective, Andrew George [et al.] 78 Convergent evolution in the lateral line system between two subfamilies of Apogonidae: a view from the innervation, Mao Sato [et al.] 79 Cryptic species and strong genetic sub-structure in a tropical freshwater stream headwater-specialist, the Exquisite Rainbowfish (Melanotaeniidae: Melanotaenia exquisita), Michael Hammer [et al.] 80 Evolution of the oral dentition in sparisomine parrotfish (Scarinae, Labriformes), J´er´emie Viviani [et al.] 81 Innovations and the conquest of the oceans by acanthomorph fishes, Peter Wainwright [et al.] 82 Integrating morphology and genetics to study the larval community of gobies in the central Arabian Red Sea, Stamatina Isari [et al.] 83 Macroevolution and speciation in freshwater Glossogobius from Sulawesi, Douglass Hoese [et al.] 84 Morphological and genetic variation of Gymnothorax undulatus (Anguilliformes: Muraenidae) in the Western Indian Ocean, Yonela Sithole [et al.] 85 Ontogenetic and phylogenetic simplification during white stripe evolution in anemonefish, Pauline Salis [et al.] 86 Ontogeny of tooth replacement of Molidae (Ocean Sunfishes) and Diodontidae (Porcupinefishes), Katherine Bemis [et al.] 87 Overview of the skeletal anatomy and systematics of Zoarcoidei (Cottiformes), Eric Hilton 88 Review of the Indo-West Pacific genus Parapterois (Scorpaenidae: Pteroinae), Mizuki Matsunuma [et al.] 89 Review of the triplefin genus Helcogramma (Tripterygiidae) in Japanese waters with two undescribed species, Satokuni Tashiro [et al.] 90 Species grouping within the genus Apristurus Garman, 1913 using dermal denticles, Justin Cordova [et al.] 91 Taxonomic review of the cardinalfish genus Apogon (Apogonidae) in Japan, Tomohiro Yoshida [et al.] 92 Taxonomic review of the genus Kaiwarinus Suzuki 1962 (Perciformes: Carangidae), Seishi Kimura [et al.] 93 Taxonomic status of five nominal species in the genus Stolephorus (Clupeiformes: Engraulidae), Harutaka Hata [et al.] 94 The Intermuscular Bones and Ligaments of Batrachoidiformes (Percomorphacea: Teleostei), Diego Vaz [et al.] 95 The Osumi Line: a newly recognized major biogeographical boundary line for fishes in southern Japan, Hiroyuki Motomura [et al.] 96 The influence of sociality and foraging strategy on the evolution of defensive morphology in butterflyfishes, Jennifer Hodge [et al.] 97 Two undescribed species of the genus Iniistius (Labridae) from Australia and the Philippines, Yoshino Fukui [et al.] 98 A4/ Bio/Phylo-geographical patterns and processes in Indo-Pacific coral reef fishes 99 A subtropical reef fish with a disjunct distribution: one species or two?, Thomas Trnski [et al.] 100 Assessing spatial patterns of coral reef fishes : the contribution of a multicomponent beta-diversity approach, Gaăelle Legras [et al.] 101 Biodiversity and biogeography of reef fishes of the remote and near-pristine Kimberley, Western Australia, Glenn Moore [et al.] 102 Biogeographic Patterns of the Pomacentridae with insight into the Coral Triangle, Chloe Nash [et al.] 103 Biogeographic patterns in major marine realms: function not taxonomy unites fish assemblages in reef, seagrass and mangrove systems, Christopher Hemingson [et al.] 104 Breakdown in assortative mating leads to hybrid swarm in pygmy angelfishes, Tane Sinclair-Taylor [et al.] 105 Comparative phylogeography of fishes in the South China Sea, Nozomu Muto [et al.] 106 Drivers of reef fish assemblages in the Indian Ocean, Melita Samoilys [et al.] 108 Ecological and evolutionary drivers of reef fish agonistic interactions, Luisa Fontoura [et al.] 109 Emergent patterns of genetic diversity across the Indo-Pacific Ocean, Libby Liggins [et al.] 110 Environmental drivers of Pomacentridae distribution and abundance in American Samoa, Motusaga Vaeoso 112 Evolutionary processes underlying reef fish latitudinal differences in biodiversity, Alexandre Siqueira [et al.] 113 Further insight into the iterative ecological radiation of damselfishes (Pomacentridae), Laura Gajdzik [et al.] 114 New phylogenetic trees, evolutionary history and global biogeographic patterns of coral reef fishes using all-species phylogenetic trees, Mark Westneat 115 Origins of Hawaiian reef fauna: evidence from sister pairs of Pacific blennies, Michael Hoban [et al.] 116 Phylogenetic diversity of New Zealand ray-finned fishes across depth and latitude., David Eme [et al.] 117 Phylogenetic perspectives on reef fish functional traits, Sergio Floeter [et al.] 119 Phylogeography, Biogeography, and the Origins of Indo-Pacific Reef Fishes, Brian Bowen [et al.] 120 Population genomics and phenotypic differentiation between pairs of sister species of clownfishes, Joris Bertrand [et al.] 121 Quantifying the emergent geography of dispersal barriers and environmental gradients: biogeographic implications across the Indo-Pacific., Eric Treml [et al.] 122 Response of reef fish functional groups to local stressors in American Samoa, Alice Lawrence 123 Revisiting the ”Center Hypotheses” of the Indo-West Pacific: Idiosyncratic genetic diversity of nine reef species offers weak support for a center of biodiversity., Ambrocio Melvin Matias [et al.] 124 The biogeography of tropical reef fishes: endemism and provinciality through time, Peter Cowman [et al.] 125 The reefish Atlas, Fran¸cois Guilhaumon [et al.] 126 A5/ Ecology & Evolution of Gobies 127 A Survey of Reproductive Morphology of Gobioid Fishes, Part 1: Rhyacichthys aspro, Kathleen Cole [et al.] 128 Characterization of hybridization within a secondary contact region of the inshore fish, Bostrychus sinensis, in the East China Sea, Shaoxiong Ding [et al.] 129 Comparative assessment of morphological and pigmentation characters during larval development of species of 10 genera of F Gobiidae and one genus of F Eleotridae, Tony Miskiewicz 130 Diet and body shape changes of p¯aroko Kelloggella disalvoi (Gobiidae) from intertidal pools of Easter Island, Southeast Pacific, J Vera-Duarte [et al.] 131 Discoveries of cryptic goby species: history and perspectives in the Indo-Pacific, Ekaterina Vasil’eva [et al.] 132 Ecological drivers of speciation and phenotypic evolution in gobiiform fishes, Tyler Mccraney [et al.] 133 Goby fossils and what they can tell us, Bettina Reichenbacher [et al.] 134 Gonad Structure of Juveniles of the Hermaphroditic Goby Species, Eviota epiphanes, Helena Barreto [et al.] 135 Molecular phylogenetics and the diversification of the gobioid fishes, Takeshi Kon [et al.] 136 Neglected taxa, morphology and molecules: recent advances in systematics of gobioid fishes (Teleostei, Gobioidei), Lukas Ră uber [et al.] 137 New data on the distribution of the fossil gobiiform fishes in the Miocene of the Eastern Paratethys, Alexander Bannikov 138 Restructuring the gonad: how does a bidirectional hermaphroditic fish undergo shifts from ova to sperm production, Jessica Maxfield [et al.] 139 Using exon capture sequencing to determine the population structure of amphidromous gobies from the genus Stenogobius in the Central Pacific, Kirill Vinnikov [et al.] 140 Wading into the Mud: Phylogeny and Evolution of the Amblyopine Gobies, Zeehan Jaafar [et al.] 141 What is the information of goby otolith morphology?, Christoph Gierl [et al.] 142 B1/ Sustainable pathways in reef fisheries: Maintaining catches and ecosystem functioning 143 A vulnerability-based approach to promote synergies in the management of smallscale fisheries, Lauric Thiault [et al.] 144 Assessing value of subsea infrastructure for fish and fisheries: informing decommissioning options, Dianne Mclean [et al.] 145 Decadal declines in the small-scale inshore fishery of Pohnpei, Micronesia, Kevin Rhodes [et al.] 146 Fish nurseries: how context drives the functional value of habitats for reef and coastal fishes., Michael Bradley [et al.] 147 Fundamental drivers of reef fish growth, Renato Morais [et al.] 148 Herbivorous fishes respond to changes in fishing gear but not to spatial management in an Indonesian national park, Sonia Bejarano [et al.] 149 Human influence on the regional distribution of bioerosion by parrotfish in New Caledonian reefs: a matter of size, Nina Schiettekatte [et al.] 150 Indo-Pacific Groupers: going, going, gone?, Min Liu [et al.] 151 Influence of market value and broad scale habitat on reef fish wariness, Ellen D’cruz [et al.] 152 Marine protected areas increase resilience among coral reef communities, Camille Mellin [et al.] 153 Modeling Population Dynamics for Sustainable Harvest of Orange Clownfish, Emma Schlatter [et al.] 154 Monitoring fisheries in the Phoenix Island Protective Area by satellite, Johnny Aase 155 Performance of the Great Barrier Reef Marine Park since the 2004 re-zoning, Mike Emslie 156 Regional Differences in Fishing Pressure and Habitat Quality Alter the Organic Matter Supporting Fish in a Temperate Rocky Reef Community, Jacquetta Udy [et al.] 157 Subsistence harvesting by a small community does not substantially compromise coral reef fish assemblages, Tyson Martin [et al.] 158 The functional backstop of reef fisheries conservation, Aaron Macneil 159 Towards management for resilience: Combined effects of natural disturbances and fisheries activities on coral reef ecosystem functioning., M´elodie Dubois [et al.] 160 Where fishing meets function: the intersection of spearfishing selectivity and functional roles of herbivorous fishes on Fijian coral reefs, Ryan Mcandrews [et al.] 161 B2/ Marine Reserves as Tools for Ecosystem-Based Fisheries Management in the Indo-Pacific 162 Can collaborative governance arrangements effectively scale up local fisheries management?, Rebecca Weeks [et al.] 163 Cost benefit analysis of proposed marine sanctuary in French Polynesia’s Austral archipelago, Guillaume Leport 164 High prevalence of homing behaviour in juvenile coral reef fishes may limit spatial responsiveness of fish communities, Robert Streit [et al.] 165 Long-term effects of marine reserves and habitat change on coral reef fishes: a 20-year study, Maya Srinivasan [et al.] 166 Management and mitigation of drifting FAD fishing in the world largest tuna purse seine fishery, Lauriane Escalle [et al.] 167 Marine protected areas are natural responses to fisheries expansion, Daniel Pauly 168 Marine reserve network design for coral reef fisheries, Nils Krueck [et al.] 169 No-take marine reserves in Moorea, French Polynesia decrease wariness but not increase abundance, Brooke Gibbons [et al.] 170 Partially protected areas: a conservation middle ground?, April Hall [et al.] 171 Relationships between Zooplankton Production, Pelagic Fish Production and Commercial Finfish Catch in Tropical Shelves, Bruce Hodgson 172 Science inventory of the Austral Islands’ marine environment and project of large marine reserve by the population of the Austral islands, Donatien Tanret [et al.] 174 The role of marine protected areas in the replenishment of local fisheries, Hugo Harrison [et al.] 175 Towards a network of large marine reserves in the Pacific ocean, J´erˆome Petit 176 Ullah Hadayet Vaeoso Motusaga Sina Van Lier Joshua Van Wynsberge Simon Vasil'ev Victor Vasil'eva Ekaterina Vaz Diego Veilleux Heather Villeger Sebastien Vinnikov Kirill Viriot Laurent Visconti Valerio Viviani Jérémie Wainwright Peter Wang Xiaojie Waqalevu Viliame Watanabe Shun Weeks Rebecca Weideli Ornella Wen Colin Weschke Emma Westneat Mark Whitmarsh Sasha Wibowo Kunto Williams Joel Wilson Shaun Wong Marian Xiong Wenhua 567 Yamaguchi Atsuko Yamamoto Shozo Yarlett Robert Yodo Taiga Yoshida Tomohiro Yu Chi-Ju Yu Yun Chen Zgliczynski Brian Zhang Jie Zhao Yahui Zhitao Wang Ziadi Fabienne Zimmerhackel Johanna Zubia Mayalen List of sponsors Minist` ere de l’Environnement, de l’Energie et de la Mer The French Ministry of Environment, Energy and the Sea is responsible for preparing and implementing the Government’s policy in sustainable development, the environment and green technologies, energy and the transition of energy, climate, the prevention of natural and technological hazards, industrial safety, transport and transportation infrastructure, equipment and the sea Fonds Pacifique The Pacific Cooperative Fund for Economics, Society and Culture known as the “Pacific Fund”, is France’s main instrument for regional cooperation in the Pacific Funded by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and through this cooperation with the independent states of the Pacific, it contributes to the regional integration of New Caledonia, French Polynesia and the Wallis and Futuna Islands 568 Polyn´ esie fran¸ caise French Polynesia Marine species have always been a very important natural resource for the ancient island societies of the Pacific, and for Polynesians in particular Today, these resources continue to contribute to the socioeconomic development of these islands Once only considered as exploitable resources, fish populations within lagoons and along the outer reef have become indicators of global change, particularly with respect to change stemming from anthropogenic pressures For this reason, the government of French Polynesia provides ongoing support to research programs and management initiatives to further our understanding of fish ecology, to develop sustainable fishing practices within lagoons and offshore areas, and to enhance the integration of traditional knowledge within current practices in resource management Paris Sciences et Lettres Paris Sciences et Lettres - PSL Research University was founded on a two-fold conviction: first, that innovation and creativity are the only solutions to today’s global challenges and second, that major academic centers across the globe will be instrumental in developing these solutions Ecole Pratique des Hautes Etudes ´ ´ The Ecole Pratique des Hautes Etudes (EPHE), established in the Sorbonne in 1868, is acknowledged as one of France’s ‘grands ´etablissements’ where research is undertaken in Life and Earth Sciences, Historical and Philological Sciences, and Religious Sciences The EPHE focuses on unique fields of knowledge Lectures and other learning strategies, offered by over 260 faculty, provide an exceptional opportunity for immediate immersion into research as practiced in a myriad of fields including languages and religions of Pre-Islamic Central Asia, the major monotheistic faiths, Chinese archaeology, Hebrew palaeography, Greek dialectology and digital humanities in the sphere of Social Sciences and Humanities; coral reef biodiversity, neurosciences and cognitive science, cellular environment and regulation in the Life and Earth Sciences sector as well as transdisciplinary issues that bridge these key areas of knowledge 569 CNRS The National Center for Scientific Research, or CNRS, is a public organization under the responsibility of the French Ministry of Education and Research Founded in 1939 by governmental decree, the CNRS aims to: *Evaluate and carry out all research capable of advancing knowledge and bringing social, cultural, and economic benefits for society *Contribute to the promotion and application of research results *Develop scientific information *Support research training *Participate in the analysis of the national and international scientific climate and its potential for evolution in order to develop a national policy Universit´ e Perpignan Via Domitia The University of Perpignan Via Domita is a modestly sized, multidisciplinary and dynamic campus Involved in projects at local level, its influence also extends towards southern Catalonia and the rest of the world Every year, some 9500 students follow courses in a broad range of areas including literature, languages, human and social sciences, law, economics, management, exact sciences, sport and tourism In addition to the academic courses that it offers, the UPVD is also involved in renewable energies: it runs a Master’s degree in solar energy, with support from the DERBI competitivity cluster and has a ”Renewable energies” department, SUP’EnR school Institut des R´ ecifs Coralliens du Pacifique The Pacific Coral Reefs Institute (IRCP) is an institute of The Ecole Pratique des Hautes Etudes (EPHE), created on January 21st, 2009 by order of the Ministry of Higher Education and Research.The main missions of IRCP are among four : – Promote, over time, on a regional scale of the Pacific, the necessary link between fundamental research, politics of conservation and formation of the actors in the field of the management of coral reefs; – Support transverse topic, which take account the contribution of the human and social sciences for the sustainable management of coral reefs; – Set up a monitoring network of coral reefs; – Work in favour of federative projects aiming at the conservation of coral reefs and so to contribute, in a context 570 of sustainable development, a contribution in the future of the coral ecosystems and peoples who depend on it Soci´ et´ e Fran¸ caise d’Ichthyologie Founded in 1976, the French Society for Ichthyology seeks to unite people with a common interest in furthering our fundamental and applied knowledge of Ichthyology; to represent the members of the Society at the national and international levels; to promote and coordinate research in the field of Ichthyology; and to liaise between its members through the dissemination of a quarterly publication produced by the Society IRD Scientific progress is necessary to further sustainable and human development: the IRD (French National Research Institute for Sustainable Development) carries this conviction with it wherever it is present, and wherever it works with its partners The IRD is a key French player on the international development agenda.It works based on an original model: equitable scientific partnership with developing countries, primarily those in the intertropical regions and the Mediterranean area.The IRD believes that only this model allows us to design solutions which are adapted to the challenges that humans and the planet are facing: pandemics, climate change, humanitarian and political crises, etc Because development challenges are challenges for the whole planet Universit´ e de Polyn´ esie fran¸ caise The University of French Polynesia is a French University located in Punaauia, Tahiti, French Polynesia The University of French Polynesia is often the talk of local newspapers, especially because of its proactive policy for the employability of its graduates The campus of Outumaoro covers an area of over 12 hectares, including facilities in excess of 15,000 m2 The University of French Polynesia has a diversified and wide course offering, adapted to the local labor market of French Polynesia As of 2012, it numbers 3051 students plus 40 PhD candidates 571 Institut Louis Malard´ e The Louis Malard´e Institute contributes to the preservation of the health, public hygiene and natural environment of French Polynesia This mission revolves around two divisions: Public Health and Scientific Research IFREMER IFREMER is a French institute that undertakes research and expert assessments to advance knowledge on the oceans and their resources, monitor the marine environment and foster the sustainable development of maritime activities Direction des Ressources Marines et Mini` eres Direction of marine and mineral resources Regulations fishing, marine areas and management planning, protection of species International Atomic Energy Agency The International Atomic Energy Agency is the world’s central intergovernmental forum for scientific and technical co-operation in the nuclear field It works for the safe, secure and peaceful uses of nuclear science and technology, contributing to international peace and security and the United Nations’ Sustainable Development Goals Pacific Community The Pacific Community (SPC) is the principal scientific and technical organisation in the Pacific region, proudly supporting development since 1947 We are an international development organisation owned and governed by our 26 country and territory members 572 Agence Fran¸ caise de D´ eveloppement Agence Fran¸caise de D´eveloppement (AFD) is a financial institution and the main implementing agency for France’s official development assistance to developing countries and overseas territories Fonds Fran¸ cais pour l’Environnement Mondial The French Facility for Global Environment (FFEM) has been working to promote protection of the global environment in developing countries since it was established by the French government in 1994 Australian Society For Fish Biology The Australian Society For Fish Biology was founded in 1971 with the intention of promoting fish studies and the interchange of information between fish biologists in a relaxed but effective manner Annual Conferences have been held once every year since the Society’s inception They are now the highlight of the Society’s calendar, providing a forum for members around Australia to meet and discuss their work Oceania Chondrichthyan Society The Oceania Chondrichthyan Society (OCS) is an international non-profit organisation created ‘To promote and facilitate the advancement of the scientific study of chondrichthyan fishes (sharks, skates, rays, and chimaeras), the promotion of education, conservation, and sustainable utilisation of natural resources, and to provide a medium for the exchange of information and ideas among those studying chondrichthyan fishes.’ 573 INTEGRE INTEGRE, Pacific Territories Initiative for Regional Management of the Environment, is a sustainable development project designed for and implemented by the four European Pacific overseas countries and territories (OCTs) Funded by the 10th European Development Fund (EDF), implemented by the Pacific Community (SPC) and steered by French Polynesia, INTEGRE aims at promoting the implementation of integrated coastal zone management (ICZM) in its beneficiary OCTs and in the Pacific region generally RESCCUE The overall goal of RESCCUE is to contribute to increasing the resilience of Pacific Island Countries and Territories (PICTs) in the context of global changes To this end RESCCUE aims at supporting adaptation to climate change (ACC) through integrated coastal management (ICM), resorting especially to economic analysis and economic and financial mechanisms Maison de la Culture - Tahiti The Tahitian House of Culture was established in 1971 in Papeete as the “Youth House – House of Culture (MJMC) by the State near the district of Paola’i Its mission is to display and share French Polynesian culture, to promote activities and artistic creations in all of its forms, and to organise and promote popular events, particularly those which profile ma’ohi culture, at local, national and international levels GIE Tahiti Tourisme Immersed in a world of majestic mountain peaks, turquoise waters and white-sand beaches, visitors to our islands create memories through authentic experiences that cannot be found anywhere else in the world For centuries, the Tahitian people have referred to this as “Mana” Mana is a life force and spirit that surrounds and connects all living things You can see it 574 Touch it Taste it Feel it And from the moment you arrive, you will understand why we say our islands are Embraced by Mana Ville de Papeete Papeete is the capital of French Polynesia, an overseas country of France in the Pacific Ocean The commune of Papeete is located on the island of Tahiti and is hosting the 10th Indo-Pacific Fish Conference Lyc´ ee Hˆ otelier de Tahiti The Hotel and Tourism School of Tahiti was established in 2003 and is the only school of its kind in the French south-west Pacific zone A state-of-the-art facility, with beautiful equipment on an idyllic and protected site, the school enrols 600 students including 120 students, from CAP to BTS, who may pursue either a professional or a technological degree in disciplines: cooking, restaurant service, hotel service, baking (bread and pastries) and tourism, with complementary specialities including bartending and catering Institut de la Jeunesse et des Sports de Polyn´ esie fran¸ caise The IJSPF is charged with wide range of youth-related topics including sports and the development of youth associations, the application of pilot projects and the implementation of new youth programs launched by the Government of French Polynesia Air Tahiti Nui Maeva – Welcome We offer daily non-stop service to Tahiti from Paris and Los Angeles as well as convenient flights to Auckland and Tokyo With our code share partners SNCF rail in France, American Airlines in the USA and Qantas in Australia, we link to over 39 other cities including Sydney, New York and Marseilles Our fresh and dynamic crew make our passengers feel like they are already in Tahiti as soon as they step on board The smile and generosity of our teams, the elegant and refined design of the cabins, the sound of ukulele, and the fragrance of the Tiare flower that is offered with our 575 traditional Maeva, the Tahitian word for welcome, are some of the tokens of friendliness that we extend They demonstrate the human and uniquely Tahitian part of our character InterContinental Tahiti Resort Spa A lavish garden setting, a gorgeous turquoise lagoon, volcanic peaks rising up in the distance – the InterContinental Tahiti Resort Spa is the perfect launch-point for your French Polynesian vacation Located on the main island in Papeete only two kilometres from the airport and city shopping, this is your first stop in French Polynesia, welcoming you into a lush 12-hectare tropical garden, surrounded by clear, cerulean seas With overwater bungalows, lagoon-view and garden-view rooms, our premium accommodation provides panoramic views over beautiful Tahiti, showcasing the sparkling ocean and the volcanic mountains of our sister island, Moorea Our 4-star resort and spa boasts two superb infinity pools set amid colourful indigenous plants and towering palms We offer a diverse range of activities and top-notch facilities, with locally renowned restaurants and vibrant tropical bars, each offering their own unique ambiance Relax in the Lobby Bar with a premium drink, enjoy an intimate dinner at Le Lotus overwater restaurant, or kick up your heels with our signature cocktails at Tiki Bar With a luxury spa, lush overwater bungalows, tropical gardens and a wide range of water sports, the InterContinental Tahiti Resort Spa is the quintessential island escape, with everything you need for a true French Polynesian getaway ISI The society ISI.PF is a polynesian LLC of computer engineering created in april 2008 by polynesian engineers It draw on outstanding expertise in application development, in order to adress the local 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experience in our islands Tahiti and Her Islands are home to 118 islands, warm and welcoming locals, unique sceneries and ancient culture This wealth and variety requires a depth of knowledge which we have been developing since our creation in 1965 Air Tahiti Air Tahiti, the inter-island airline in French Polynesia, has daily flights to 49 stops across the country, covering the area of Europe, over distances from 15 km (the shortest between Tahiti and Moorea) up to 1600 km (Tahiti-Mangareva) This latter distance is equivalent to a Paris/Stockholm or New York/Miami First private sector employer in French Polynesia, the company insures a public service mission It drives economic and social development of the archipelagoes and a key player in the tourism development Air Tahiti is deeply involved in local actions promoting the Polynesian culture, the environment, the social and the Polynesian sports Office des Postes et T´ el´ ecommunication The autonomy status of April 12,1996 extended French Polynesia’s competence to international relations in the field of posts and telecommunications The Assembly and the Government of the country are now responsible for the regulation of all activities in the postal and telecommunications sector, except for defense and security communications, and communications and radio frequency regulation, which remain within the competences of State Since this reform, the post and telecommunications Office (OPT) is the only public operator of postal services and telecommunications 577 With its 900 employees, 87 agencies and centers scattered over 57 islands spread over a sea surface as large as the size of Europe, the OPT, while carrying out its missions, has been involved in the Sustainable Development Plan since 2013 In the digital age, OPT is a civic and eco-responsible company and is proud to contribute to the major challenges for the preservation of our planet and to welcome all participants and members of the 10th Indo-Pacific Fish Conference (IPFC10) Vini In French Polynesia, Vini S.A.S is the leading provider of mobile, fixed data and TV content communications services for the retail and business communities, with more than 220.000 customers Vini is a wholly owned subsidiary of Office des Postes et T´el´ecommunications Our ambition, while in the middle of south pacific, is to deliver the best innovative communication services and systems that address our customers’ critical needs and especially, their connection to the rest of the world Additionally, we are determined to differentiate ourselves in the marketplace by delivering an outstanding customer experience, allowing us to maintain market share on the new competitive environment Polyn´ esie 1` ere Polyn´esie 1`ere is a French-language public broadcast company located in French Polynesia – one of France’s Overseas Territories – for diffusion of programming throughout French Polynesia Tahiti Nui T´ el´ evision Tahiti Nui T´el´evision (TNTV) is a cable and satellite television channel created in 2000 TNTV airs local programs produced by the channel, children’s programmes and news programmes in French and in Tahitian 578 Miss Tahiti CROWNING MISS TAHITI HAS BECOME A REAL INSTITUTION IN FRENCH POLYNESIA SINCE 1960 In the early days, the Miss Tahiti contest was organised by the Hotel Tahiti, which is no longer standing It drew throngs of spectators, many of whom came to cheer on their nominee As the contest became increasingly popular, it was moved to Papeete, which has venues large enough to hold large audiences: To’at? Square or the gardens of Papeete’s City Hall For all Polynesians, watching the Miss Tahiti Pageant is a must, whether by attending the pageant itself or seeing it on television Banque de Polyn´ esie The Bank of Polynesia puts all of its expertise in business, finance and the economy into the hands of its clients, with the goal of becoming the bank of reference relational bank on the Fenua The strength of an international group : As a 72 Oc´ eanienne de Services Bancaires The Oceanic Banking Services (OSB) society was created in December 1994 to improve the processing of payments (bank card transactions, checks, management of bank machines, etc.) Since this time, the OSB has enabled the electronic interoperability and the harmonization of existing systems for all the banking and financial institutions in the area Renault In 2015, the Renault-Nissan Alliance sold 8.5 million vehicles in almost 200 countries around the world through its eight brands: RENAULT, DACIA, RENAULT SAMSUNG MOTORS, NISSAN, INFINITI, DATSUN, VENUCIA and LADA This record figure corresponds to more than one vehicle in every ten sold worldwide The Renault-Nissan Alliance is the world’s fourth-biggest vehicle manufacturer 579 WAN An environmental asset; Robert Wan’s farms are located some 5000 km from the nearest industrial activity, representing a unique and protected biodiversity with totally pristine, unpolluted waters A commercial asset; Robert Wan produces a luxury product of rarity and the world’s only gem produced by a living creature We believe these pearls to be the symbol of harmony between man and nature, and an inspiration to the emerging values of the 21st century Wing Chong By Wing Chong, you will find a wide range of products at the best prices for the polynesian customers, and a team at your service for any assistance Come and visit our showroom to benefit exclusive discounts and special offers! Vaimato Industrial society produising VAIMATO natural spring water Nautisport NAUTISPORT is a specialist shop in items relating to sea activities The shop has various sections such as: fishing, scuba-diving, marine electronic devices, ropes, spare parts, various nautical items The NAUTISPORT shop and its Show Room are located in Tahiti – Fare Ute There is also a branch in Raiatea TipTop MF Production (Former Raumanu Industry) manufactures and distributes ice-cream and sorbets of quality since more than 40 years The story began with the Tip Top ice-cream, locally manufactured in the factory of Titioro as a Neo-Zealand franchised store Nowaday well-known by all the Polynesian, the range has been developed for all tastes and budgets, 580 from the low price Freshka brand to the high-end Sorbets de Tahiti products MF Production hire 47 persons to the production, stock, sell and distribution of its products across the entire country By buying MF Production products, you support the only locally-made industry and the local economy as well Yes Tahiti Travelling with yestahiti you choose safety and the services of the first travel agency in French Polynesia, since 1965 Yestahiti offers special legal and commercial conditions as French agencies Nescaf´ e Nescaf´e is a brand of coffee made by Nestl´e Fenua Ma Since 15 years, FENUA MA is in charge of the waste treating and recycling management in French Polynesia During the IPFC, Fenua Ma will provide baskets for selective waste sorting Rotui Jus de Fruits de Moorea a vu le jour suite `a la cr´eation de la coop´erative des producteurs agricoles locaux, durant une p´eriode de surproduction, en juin 1981 Aid´ee `a cette ´epoque par le gouvernement et en partenariat avec la Commune de Moorea, la banque Socredo, la Chambre d’Agriculture et d’autres entreprises priv´ees comme la Brasserie de Tahiti (le premier distributeur de la marque Rotui), elle avait pour objectif de bˆatir une usine de jus de fruit frais `a l’ananas Jus de Fruits de Moorea accueille au sein mˆeme de son usine, la soci´et´e Manutea Tahiti, cr´e´ee en 1983, qui s’est sp´ecialis´ee dans la fabrication de boissons alcoolis´ees, de confiseries et de condiments 581 ... 479 H3/ Ciguatera fish poisoning in the Indo- Pacific region 480 Applicability of the fluorescent Receptor Binding Assay (RBAf) to the detection of Ciguatoxins in Pacific reef fish. , Taiana Darius... Macrouridae) in the southeast Atlantic and west Indian Ocean sectors of the Southern Ocean based on genetic and morphological analyses of samples from the toothfish longline fishery, Peter Mcmillan... Dispersal in the Indo- Pacific 250 A ecologist guide to disentangling genetic and non-genetic heritabilities in wild marine fish populations, the case study of the Kimbe island orange clownfish, Benoit

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  • A1/ Evolution and biology of ‘primitive’ and fossil fishes

    • Adaptive radiation of Pelagia (Teleostei: Acanthomorpha) indicated by 3D morphometry, Hermione Beckett [et al.]

    • Awesome variation in genomic organization in polyploid Acipenseriformes, Anna Barmintseva [et al.]

    • Dead fish CSI: Reconstructing the enigmatic Late Cretaceous billfish analogue Protosphyraena (Teleosteomorpha: Pachycormidae), Anthony Maltese

    • Early members of a ‘living fossil' lineage and a later origin for modern ray-finned fishes, Sam Giles [et al.]

    • Insight on sturgeon phylogeny and biogeography from mitogenomes and NGS-based nuclear loci sequencing., Nikolai Mugue [et al.]

    • Megaplanktivory, Past and Present: A comparison of Jurassic large suspension-feeders of the IndoPacific with contemporary analogues., Jeff Liston

    • New Data on the Endoskeletal Morphology and Evolution of Early Jawed Fishes, Martin Brazeau [et al.]

    • New marine fish faunas from the middle Eocene (Lutetian) of Pakistan: implications for the origin of the Indo-Pacific fauna, Matt Friedman [et al.]

    • Polyploid evolution and functional genome diploidization in sturgeons, Victor Vasil'ev [et al.]

    • Saber-toothed fossil anchovies (Teleostei: Engrauloidea) from the early-middle Eocene of Belgium and Pakistan, with comments on clupeiform phylogeny and feeding adaptations, Alessio Capobianco [et al.]

    • The Emergence of Modern Marine Fish Faunas after the Jurassic-Cretaceous Crisis, Lauren Sallan [et al.]

    • The evolution of teleost otolith morphology and its applications in paleoichthyology, Werner Schwarzhans [et al.]

    • The features of the Neogene stage of the North Pacific ichthyofauna development as inferred from two fossil fish complexes from Sakhalin, Russia, Mikhail Nazarkin

  • A2/ Genes to Genomes: Forging ahead in the study of marine evolution

    • A high-quality Genome of the Clownfish Amphiprion Percula, Robert Lehmann [et al.]

    • Addressing intractable groups in the Fish Tree of Life using genome-wide Gene Genealogy Interrogation, Ricardo Betancur [et al.]

    • Comparative genomics of anemonefish and chromosome evolution in reef fish, Damien Lightfoot [et al.]

    • Contrasting patterns of population structure and connectivity across northern Australia in a commercially important fish Lutjanus johnii: integrating population genetics, genomics and ecological markers., Laura Taillebois [et al.]

    • Coral Reefs as Stepping Stones in a Range Expansion: The historical Demography of blacktip reef sharks revealed by genomic data, Stefano Mona [et al.]

    • Draft assembly and annotation of A. glossodonta and A. vulpes genomes, Keoni Kauwe [et al.]

    • Evolutionary history of endemic coral reef fish species of Rapa Nui, Erwan Delrieu-Trottin [et al.]

    • Explosive diversification of marine fishes at the Cretaceous-Paleogene boundary, Brant Faircloth [et al.]

    • Finding Evolutionary Links and Genes in Adaptive Radiations of Reef Gobies (Gobiidae) by Targeted Gene Capture, Kendall Johnson [et al.]

    • Genomic Analysis of Disjunct Marine Fish Populations of the Northeastern Pacific and Sea of Cortez, Eric Garcia [et al.]

    • Genomic signatures of parallel selection in surfperches (Embiotocidae), Gary Longo [et al.]

    • Genomics of adaptation in the ocean, Agostinho Antunes

    • Genomics of habitat choice and adaptive evolution in the deep sea, Michelle Gaither [et al.]

    • How the devil ray got its horns: the genetic basis of body plan remodeling in manta rays and their relatives, Karen Crow

    • Hybridisation between sympatric species of coral reef fish, Samuel Payet [et al.]

    • Investigating the genetic basis of clownfish adaptive radiation using comparative genomics, Anna Marcionetti [et al.]

    • Long live the kingfish: patterns and processes of evolution in carangiform fishes, Jessica Glass [et al.]

    • Marine connectivity in time and space: Insights from an intertidal goby, Joshua Thia [et al.]

    • Pathways and perils: Building up genomic resources in a specialized group of reef fish, Joseph Dibattista

    • Population genomics of New Zealand snapper and testing for size-selective fishing using ancient DNA, Peter Ritchie

    • The Future of Phylogenomics, Prosanta Chakrabarty

    • The Genomic Observatories Metadatabase (GeOMe): A new repository for field and sampling event metadata associated with genetic samples, Eric D. Crandall [et al.]

    • Through a liquid glass to the eye of the beholder: Visual ecology of coral reef fishes isolated by the Isthmus of Panama, Michele Pierotti [et al.]

    • Time-calibrated Phylogenomic Reconstruction of Batfishes (Lophiiformes: Ogcocephalidae), Cerise Chen

    • Toward resolving complex evolutionary history of the Indo-West Pacific sergeant majors (Pomacentridae: Abudefduf), Wei-Jen Chen

    • Understanding Anti-Tropical Distributions in Centrarchiformes, William Ludt [et al.]

  • A3/ Integrative approaches in understanding fish diversity: Morphology, Systematics, and Taxonomy

    • A review of the genus Sparidentex (Pisces: Perciformes, Sparidae) with a new species from the Indian Ocean, Yukio Iwatsuki [et al.]

    • Balistoid Habitat Use and Swimming Performance: An Evolutionary Perspective, Andrew George [et al.]

    • Convergent evolution in the lateral line system between two subfamilies of Apogonidae: a view from the innervation, Mao Sato [et al.]

    • Cryptic species and strong genetic sub-structure in a tropical freshwater stream headwater-specialist, the Exquisite Rainbowfish (Melanotaeniidae: Melanotaenia exquisita), Michael Hammer [et al.]

    • Evolution of the oral dentition in sparisomine parrotfish (Scarinae, Labriformes), Jérémie Viviani [et al.]

    • Innovations and the conquest of the oceans by acanthomorph fishes, Peter Wainwright [et al.]

    • Integrating morphology and genetics to study the larval community of gobies in the central Arabian Red Sea, Stamatina Isari [et al.]

    • Macroevolution and speciation in freshwater Glossogobius from Sulawesi, Douglass Hoese [et al.]

    • Morphological and genetic variation of Gymnothorax undulatus (Anguilliformes: Muraenidae) in the Western Indian Ocean, Yonela Sithole [et al.]

    • Ontogenetic and phylogenetic simplification during white stripe evolution in anemonefish, Pauline Salis [et al.]

    • Ontogeny of tooth replacement of Molidae (Ocean Sunfishes) and Diodontidae (Porcupinefishes), Katherine Bemis [et al.]

    • Overview of the skeletal anatomy and systematics of Zoarcoidei (Cottiformes), Eric Hilton

    • Review of the Indo-West Pacific genus Parapterois (Scorpaenidae: Pteroinae), Mizuki Matsunuma [et al.]

    • Review of the triplefin genus Helcogramma (Tripterygiidae) in Japanese waters with two undescribed species, Satokuni Tashiro [et al.]

    • Species grouping within the genus Apristurus Garman, 1913 using dermal denticles, Justin Cordova [et al.]

    • Taxonomic review of the cardinalfish genus Apogon (Apogonidae) in Japan, Tomohiro Yoshida [et al.]

    • Taxonomic review of the genus Kaiwarinus Suzuki 1962 (Perciformes: Carangidae), Seishi Kimura [et al.]

    • Taxonomic status of five nominal species in the genus Stolephorus (Clupeiformes: Engraulidae), Harutaka Hata [et al.]

    • The Intermuscular Bones and Ligaments of Batrachoidiformes (Percomorphacea: Teleostei), Diego Vaz [et al.]

    • The Osumi Line: a newly recognized major biogeographical boundary line for fishes in southern Japan, Hiroyuki Motomura [et al.]

    • The influence of sociality and foraging strategy on the evolution of defensive morphology in butterflyfishes, Jennifer Hodge [et al.]

    • Two undescribed species of the genus Iniistius (Labridae) from Australia and the Philippines, Yoshino Fukui [et al.]

  • A4/ Bio/Phylo-geographical patterns and processes in Indo-Pacific coral reef fishes

    • A subtropical reef fish with a disjunct distribution: one species or two?, Thomas Trnski [et al.]

    • Assessing spatial patterns of coral reef fishes : the contribution of a multi-component beta-diversity approach, Gaëlle Legras [et al.]

    • Biodiversity and biogeography of reef fishes of the remote and near-pristine Kimberley, Western Australia, Glenn Moore [et al.]

    • Biogeographic Patterns of the Pomacentridae with insight into the Coral Triangle, Chloe Nash [et al.]

    • Biogeographic patterns in major marine realms: function not taxonomy unites fish assemblages in reef, seagrass and mangrove systems, Christopher Hemingson [et al.]

    • Breakdown in assortative mating leads to hybrid swarm in pygmy angelfishes, Tane Sinclair-Taylor [et al.]

    • Comparative phylogeography of fishes in the South China Sea, Nozomu Muto [et al.]

    • Drivers of reef fish assemblages in the Indian Ocean, Melita Samoilys [et al.]

    • Ecological and evolutionary drivers of reef fish agonistic interactions, Luisa Fontoura [et al.]

    • Emergent patterns of genetic diversity across the Indo-Pacific Ocean, Libby Liggins [et al.]

    • Environmental drivers of Pomacentridae distribution and abundance in American Samoa, Motusaga Vaeoso

    • Evolutionary processes underlying reef fish latitudinal differences in biodiversity, Alexandre Siqueira [et al.]

    • Further insight into the iterative ecological radiation of damselfishes (Pomacentridae), Laura Gajdzik [et al.]

    • New phylogenetic trees, evolutionary history and global biogeographic patterns of coral reef fishes using all-species phylogenetic trees, Mark Westneat

    • Origins of Hawaiian reef fauna: evidence from sister pairs of Pacific blennies, Michael Hoban [et al.]

    • Phylogenetic diversity of New Zealand ray-finned fishes across depth and latitude., David Eme [et al.]

    • Phylogenetic perspectives on reef fish functional traits, Sergio Floeter [et al.]

    • Phylogeography, Biogeography, and the Origins of Indo-Pacific Reef Fishes, Brian Bowen [et al.]

    • Population genomics and phenotypic differentiation between pairs of sister species of clownfishes, Joris Bertrand [et al.]

    • Quantifying the emergent geography of dispersal barriers and environmental gradients: biogeographic implications across the Indo-Pacific., Eric Treml [et al.]

    • Response of reef fish functional groups to local stressors in American Samoa, Alice Lawrence

    • Revisiting the ''Center Hypotheses'' of the Indo-West Pacific: Idiosyncratic genetic diversity of nine reef species offers weak support for a center of biodiversity., Ambrocio Melvin Matias [et al.]

    • The biogeography of tropical reef fishes: endemism and provinciality through time, Peter Cowman [et al.]

    • The reefish Atlas, François Guilhaumon [et al.]

  • A5/ Ecology & Evolution of Gobies

    • A Survey of Reproductive Morphology of Gobioid Fishes, Part 1: Rhyacichthys aspro, Kathleen Cole [et al.]

    • Characterization of hybridization within a secondary contact region of the inshore fish, Bostrychus sinensis, in the East China Sea, Shaoxiong Ding [et al.]

    • Comparative assessment of morphological and pigmentation characters during larval development of species of 10 genera of F. Gobiidae and one genus of F. Eleotridae, Tony Miskiewicz

    • Diet and body shape changes of pāroko Kelloggella disalvoi (Gobiidae) from intertidal pools of Easter Island, Southeast Pacific, J Vera-Duarte [et al.]

    • Discoveries of cryptic goby species: history and perspectives in the Indo-Pacific, Ekaterina Vasil'eva [et al.]

    • Ecological drivers of speciation and phenotypic evolution in gobiiform fishes, Tyler Mccraney [et al.]

    • Goby fossils and what they can tell us, Bettina Reichenbacher [et al.]

    • Gonad Structure of Juveniles of the Hermaphroditic Goby Species, Eviota epiphanes, Helena Barreto [et al.]

    • Molecular phylogenetics and the diversification of the gobioid fishes, Takeshi Kon [et al.]

    • Neglected taxa, morphology and molecules: recent advances in systematics of gobioid fishes (Teleostei, Gobioidei), Lukas Rüber [et al.]

    • New data on the distribution of the fossil gobiiform fishes in the Miocene of the Eastern Paratethys, Alexander Bannikov

    • Restructuring the gonad: how does a bidirectional hermaphroditic fish undergo shifts from ova to sperm production, Jessica Maxfield [et al.]

    • Using exon capture sequencing to determine the population structure of amphidromous gobies from the genus Stenogobius in the Central Pacific, Kirill Vinnikov [et al.]

    • Wading into the Mud: Phylogeny and Evolution of the Amblyopine Gobies, Zeehan Jaafar [et al.]

    • What is the information of goby otolith morphology?, Christoph Gierl [et al.]

  • B1/ Sustainable pathways in reef fisheries: Maintaining catches and ecosystem functioning

    • A vulnerability-based approach to promote synergies in the management of small-scale fisheries, Lauric Thiault [et al.]

    • Assessing value of subsea infrastructure for fish and fisheries: informing decommissioning options, Dianne Mclean [et al.]

    • Decadal declines in the small-scale inshore fishery of Pohnpei, Micronesia, Kevin Rhodes [et al.]

    • Fish nurseries: how context drives the functional value of habitats for reef and coastal fishes., Michael Bradley [et al.]

    • Fundamental drivers of reef fish growth, Renato Morais [et al.]

    • Herbivorous fishes respond to changes in fishing gear but not to spatial management in an Indonesian national park, Sonia Bejarano [et al.]

    • Human influence on the regional distribution of bioerosion by parrotfish in New Caledonian reefs: a matter of size, Nina Schiettekatte [et al.]

    • Indo-Pacific Groupers: going, going, gone?, Min Liu [et al.]

    • Influence of market value and broad scale habitat on reef fish wariness, Ellen D'cruz [et al.]

    • Marine protected areas increase resilience among coral reef communities, Camille Mellin [et al.]

    • Modeling Population Dynamics for Sustainable Harvest of Orange Clownfish, Emma Schlatter [et al.]

    • Monitoring fisheries in the Phoenix Island Protective Area by satellite, Johnny Aase

    • Performance of the Great Barrier Reef Marine Park since the 2004 re-zoning, Mike Emslie

    • Regional Differences in Fishing Pressure and Habitat Quality Alter the Organic Matter Supporting Fish in a Temperate Rocky Reef Community, Jacquetta Udy [et al.]

    • Subsistence harvesting by a small community does not substantially compromise coral reef fish assemblages, Tyson Martin [et al.]

    • The functional backstop of reef fisheries conservation, Aaron Macneil

    • Towards management for resilience: Combined effects of natural disturbances and fisheries activities on coral reef ecosystem functioning., Mélodie Dubois [et al.]

    • Where fishing meets function: the intersection of spearfishing selectivity and functional roles of herbivorous fishes on Fijian coral reefs, Ryan Mcandrews [et al.]

  • B2/ Marine Reserves as Tools for Ecosystem-Based Fisheries Management in the Indo-Pacific

    • Can collaborative governance arrangements effectively scale up local fisheries management?, Rebecca Weeks [et al.]

    • Cost benefit analysis of proposed marine sanctuary in French Polynesia's Austral archipelago, Guillaume Leport

    • High prevalence of homing behaviour in juvenile coral reef fishes may limit spatial responsiveness of fish communities, Robert Streit [et al.]

    • Long-term effects of marine reserves and habitat change on coral reef fishes: a 20-year study, Maya Srinivasan [et al.]

    • Management and mitigation of drifting FAD fishing in the world largest tuna purse seine fishery, Lauriane Escalle [et al.]

    • Marine protected areas are natural responses to fisheries expansion, Daniel Pauly

    • Marine reserve network design for coral reef fisheries, Nils Krueck [et al.]

    • No-take marine reserves in Moorea, French Polynesia decrease wariness but do not increase abundance, Brooke Gibbons [et al.]

    • Partially protected areas: a conservation middle ground?, April Hall [et al.]

    • Relationships between Zooplankton Production, Pelagic Fish Production and Commercial Finfish Catch in Tropical Shelves, Bruce Hodgson

    • Science inventory of the Austral Islands' marine environment and project of large marine reserve by the population of the 5 Austral islands, Donatien Tanret [et al.]

    • The role of marine protected areas in the replenishment of local fisheries, Hugo Harrison [et al.]

    • Towards a network of large marine reserves in the Pacific ocean, Jérôme Petit

    • Tracking Interactions of Large Marine Protected Areas and Fisheries from Space, Kristina Boerder [et al.]

  • B3/ Aquaculture of native marine and estuarian South Pacific finfish

    • Aquaculture in French Polynésia: from rural to industrial sectors, Lafille Marc-André

    • Environmental analysis method to guide aquaculture sustainable development: case study in Mayotte marine natural park, Killian Chary [et al.]

    • Nutritional evaluation of two types of euryhaline rotifers Brachionus plicatilis sp. complex and digestive enzyme response at first feeding in Japanese Flounder, Paralichthys olivaceus, Viliame Waqalevu [et al.]

    • Treatment of bacterial disease in fish aquaculture by natural products from French Polynesia, Tepoerau Mai [et al.]

  • C1/ The role of fishes on coral reefs

    • A morphological and functional basis for maximum prey size in piscivorous fishes, Michalis Mihalitsis [et al.]

    • Assessing the Population Structure and Characterizing Spatio-temporal Distributions of a Red Hind (Epinephelus guttatus) Spawning Aggregation in St. Croix, U.S. Virgin Islands, Jonathan Brown [et al.]

    • Behavioral indicators provide insight into a fish's perception of coral reefs: implications for management., Margaret Malone [et al.]

    • Collective Aggressiveness of Fish Social Groups Contributes to Variation in Coral Replenishment, Sally Holbrook [et al.]

    • Coral-damselfish mutualism: effects on photosynthesis and links to predation risk, Sebastian Ferse [et al.]

    • Exploring the functional traits which may provide mechanism of assembly rules among reef fishes from contrasting habitat types, Catalina Ruz [et al.]

    • Fish as a primary source of reef carbonate sediment: an overlooked ecosystem process?, Michael Salter [et al.]

    • Fish-derived nutrients and their roles in Indo-Pacific coral reef systems, Burkepile Deron [et al.]

    • Lek-like versus Promiscuous Mating Systems on a Resident Spawning Aggregation Site: Examples From the Labridae, Terry Donaldson

    • Look out behind! Are additional cameras in baited video worthwhile?, Sasha Whitmarsh [et al.]

    • Mucus-secreting lips offer protection to suction-feeding corallivorous fishes, Victor Huertas [et al.]

    • Pacific-Wide Analysis of Specialization in Herbivorous Reef Fish Assemblages, Eileen Nalley [et al.]

    • Parrotfish movement patterns vary with spatiotemporal scale, Jenn Caselle [et al.]

    • Parrotfishes: Can the hypothesis of obligate microphagy explain their evolutionary history and ecological success., John Choat [et al.]

    • Positive indirect effects of top-predators on the survival and behaviour of juvenile fishes, Maria Del Mar Palacios [et al.]

    • Quantifying reef-scale rates of parrotfish bioerosion and sediment production, Robert Yarlett [et al.]

    • Responses of coral reef fishes to predation risk, Maria Palacios [et al.]

    • Spatial differentiation of tropical clupeid populations, Kynan Hartog-Burnett [et al.]

    • The conceptual and empirical basis of trophic resource partitioning in herbivorous coral reef fishes, Kendall Clements [et al.]

    • The damselfish domino effect: a competitive release in a highly partitioned guild reveals subordinates versatility, Jacob Eurich [et al.]

    • The functional roles of fishes on coral reefs: mediation by sediments, Sterling Tebbett [et al.]

    • The role of cryptobenthic fishes on coral reefs, Christopher Goatley [et al.]

    • The role of fishes on coral reefs: an overview, David Bellwood [et al.]

    • The struggle for existence – how competition reigns, especially when predation abounds, Stuart Sandin [et al.]

  • C2/ Symbiosis in Fishes

    • Cleaner wrasse Labroides dimidiatus presence increases post-settlement success of a coral reef fish, Alexandra Grutter [et al.]

    • Embryonic learning of chemical cues via the parents' host in anemonefish (Amphiprion ocellaris), Kazuko Miyagawa-Kohshima [et al.]

    • Molecular phylogeny of obligate fish parasites of the family Cymothoidae (Isopoda, Crustacea): Evolution of the attachment mode to host fish and the habitat shift from saline water to freshwater, Hiroki Hata [et al.]

    • Skin microbiome of coral reef fishes is diversified, species-specific and not phylogenetically conserved, Marlène Chiarello [et al.]

    • The cleaner's mimic Aspidontus taeniatus utilizes the effect of aggressive mimicry only when it is small, Misaki Fujisawa [et al.]

    • The pair bonding in swimming goby, Ptereleotris hanae and the association between P. hanae and coinhabitant two species, nest-digging shrimp and its sentinel goby, Izumi Akagawa [et al.]

  • C3/ Fish trophic chains in the Indo-Pacific

    • A new method for inferring diet of coral reef fish by determining mineralized elements in situ within digestive contents using X-Ray microtomography, Jérémie Viviani [et al.]

    • A reconstruction of coral reef food webs in Moorea: fish gut content metabarcoding as a tool to disentangle trophic interactions, Jordan Casey [et al.]

    • Comparative visual, molecular and stable isotope diet analysis in fishery-targeted groupers, Jordan Matley [et al.]

    • Insights from compound-specific isotope analysis into the functional redundancy of herbivorous reef fishes, Matthew Tietbohl [et al.]

    • Patterns of trophic structure in a complex marine food web, Brian Zgliczynski [et al.]

    • Seabird nutrients enhance fish productivity across trophic levels on coral reefs, Nick Graham [et al.]

    • Spatial Variation of Environmental DNA in Coral Reef Ecosystems, Zachary Gold

    • Stomach Content Analysis of Stocky Hawkfish (Cirrhitus pinnulatus) in Laie Bay, Oahu, Hawaii, Daxton Brooks [et al.]

  • C4/ Acoustic Ecology of Indo-Pacific Fishes

    • Acoustic space sharing in the hullabaloo of a coral reef in Moorea Island, French Polynesia., Frédéric Bertucci [et al.]

    • Assessing ecological implications of boat noise disturbance on coral reef fish communities, Emma Weschke [et al.]

    • Bad parenting and cheating: Impacts of motorboat noise on coral reef fish, Sophie Nedelec [et al.]

    • Degraded Great Barrier Reef no longer sounds like home, Tim Gordon [et al.]

    • Diversity of fish sound types in the Pearl River Estuary, China, Wang Zhitao [et al.]

    • Effects of noise on the communication space of New Zealand bigeye, Pempheris adspersa, Rosalyn Putland [et al.]

    • Hearing Nemo: Alarm Calling Behaviour in Coral Reef Fish, Isla Keesje Davidson [et al.]

    • Parrotfish Soundscapes: Implications for coral reef monitoring and management, Timothy Tricas [et al.]

    • Singing in the right Cay?: Fish choruse contributions to soundscapes, Miles Parsons [et al.]

    • Sound production mechanism in the boxfish Ostracion meleagris and O. cubicus, Eric Parmentier [et al.]

    • Soundtrack of the Anthropocene: Impacts of global change on coral reef communities in the 21st Century, Steve Simpson

    • The influence of habitat degradation on the susceptibility of coral reef fish to motorboat noise, Harry Harding [et al.]

    • The use of baited underwater video to monitor fish behaviour in response to boat motor noise, Craig Radford [et al.]

  • C5/ Biotelemetry

    • Do Australian Bass overcome an instream barrier during migration?, Culum Brown [et al.]

    • Movement, habitat preferences and behaviour of swordfish satellite tagged at the southern extent of their known range in Australia, Sean Tracey [et al.]

    • Multispecies presence and connectivity around a designed artificial reef off coastal Sydney, Australia, Krystle Keller [et al.]

    • Navigation and homing ability in a benthic shark, Sherrie Chambers [et al.]

    • Travels with whale sharks: satellite-tracking the world's biggest fish, Samantha Reynolds [et al.]

    • Whale shark demography and spatial ecology in Cenderawasih Bay, West Papua, Indonesia, Megan Meyers [et al.]

  • C6/ Connectivity and Dispersal in the Indo-Pacific

    • A ecologist guide to disentangling genetic and non-genetic heritabilities in wild marine fish populations, the case study of the Kimbe island orange clownfish, Benoit Pujol [et al.]

    • Connectivity within the Red Sea and around the Arabian Peninsula, Michael Berumen [et al.]

    • Creating empirically-validated simulations of reef fish larval dispersal, Michael Bode [et al.]

    • From spawning to settlement: Identifying fine-scale connectivity in the Convict Tang, Acanthurus triostegus, across Oʻahu, Richard Coleman [et al.]

    • Larval dispersal and connectivity in a coral reef seascape, Geoffrey Jones [et al.]

    • Larval quality (morphological, physiological and behavioural traits) and dispersal, Ricardo Beldade [et al.]

    • Low potential for adaptive evolution in a wild reef fish population, Océane Salles [et al.]

    • Ontogeny of swimming abilities of larval coral reef fishes and a hypothesis for their impact on the spatial scale of dispersal, John Majoris [et al.]

    • Paradigm Lost: Climate change will demolish the paradigm of biophysical larval-fish dispersal, Jeffrey Leis

    • Reef fish larval dispersal underscores major challenges for regional coral reef management in the Philippines, Rene Abesamis [et al.]

    • Reef health influences self-recruitment in a meta-population of Skunk Clownfish (Amphiprion akallopisos) in the Indian Ocean connected through larval dispersal, Filip Huyghe [et al.]

    • Scales of marine dispersal, from ecological to evolutionary, Malin Pinsky [et al.]

    • The ghost in the machine: a review of the biology behind biophysical models of marine larval dispersal, Stephen Swearer [et al.]

    • There and back again: patterns and consequences of larval dispersal, Jeff Shima [et al.]

    • Weak and monthly variable self-recruitment in the coral reef damselfish Dascyllus aruanus in New Caledonia, Cécile Fauvelot [et al.]

  • C7/ Larval recruitment in marine and freshwater fishes: Current issues and future directions

    • Are mangroves important for reef fish on the Island of Mayotte in the Indian Ocean?, Rakamaly Madi Moussa

    • Artificial Light At Night in the Underwater World, Jack O'connor [et al.]

    • Effect of the 2011 Tsunami disaster accompanying the Great East Japan Earthquake on the population dynamics of Japanese tube snout Aulichthys japonicus, Go Katayose [et al.]

    • Environmental effects on larval swimming performance in Amphiprion chrysopterus, Daphne Cortese [et al.]

    • Fish sampling like nowhere else: remote video methods for studying fish populations in a croc infested, turbid, macrotidal system, Camilla Piggott [et al.]

    • Gaining the competitive edge: is early life-history linked to post-settlement performance in a territorial reef fish?, Emily Fobert [et al.]

    • Importance of metamorphosis in coral reef fish larval recruitment facing global change and water pollution, Marc Besson [et al.]

    • Otolith strontium isotope ratios identify recruitment sources of facultatively amphidromous fish in a complex riverine lake system, Matt Jarvis [et al.]

    • Recruitment of Anguilla japonica glass eels in the Yangtze Estuary, China in relation to environmental variables, Hongyi Guo [et al.]

    • Thyroid-hormone regulated metamorphosis: a dynamic and plastic process allowing ecological and developmental coupling of life history transitions, Vincent Laudet [et al.]

  • D1/ Biology, Ecology, Evolution and Conservation of Chondrichthyan fishes

    • A Nursery Ground of Sicklefin Lemon Shark, Negaprion acutidens, at the Water of Dongsha Island in Dongsha Atoll National Park, Taiwan, Chen Yu Yun [et al.]

    • An Interactive Online Database for Extant Chondrichthyan Fishes, Gavin Naylor

    • Are we underestimating elasmobranch abundances on BRUVS by using traditional metrics?, Samantha Sherman [et al.]

    • Baited remote underwater video system (BRUVS) survey of elasmobranch abundance and distribution in the Arabian Gulf., Rima Jabado [et al.]

    • Characterization, valuation and conservation of the first nursery area of blacktip and hammerhead sharks in the Eastern Atlantic Ocean, Catarina Frazao-Santos [et al.]

    • Comparative behavioral and physiological response to longline capture in elasmobranchs, Brendan Talwar [et al.]

    • Conservation Status of Sharks, Rays, and Chimaeras in the Arabian Sea and Adjacent Waters, Jabado Rima [et al.]

    • Direct evidence of contemporary sex-biased reproductive dispersal in threatened river sharks., Pierre Feutry [et al.]

    • Evidence for rapid recovery of shark populations within a coral reef marine protected area, Conrad Speed [et al.]

    • Gigantothermy in whale sharks – tracking the behavioural strategies of a homeothermic ectotherm, Mark Meekan [et al.]

    • How effective are front-line community programs in addressing the threats to marine species and habitats? A case study from the world's largest manta ray hunting community., Sarah Lewis [et al.]

    • Incremental analysis of vertebral centra in wild and captive-bred bull sharks (Carcharhinus leucas) through micro-computed tomography, Fabienne Ziadi-Kuenzli [et al.]

    • Long-term biological monitoring and stable isotope analysis of Aetobatus narutobiei in Ariake Bay, Japan: Feeding ecology and foraging impact on bivalve fisheries, Atsuko Yamaguchi [et al.]

    • Projects Abroad – Fiji Shark Program: Linking Citizen Science to Fisheries Management, Gauthier Mescam

    • Species diversity, utilization status and conservation of sharks and rays in China, Jie Zhang

    • Stable isotope analysis of two filter feeding sharks in the waters off Taiwan, Chi-Ju Yu [et al.]

    • Taxonomic review of the longnose dogfish genus Deania (Centrophoridae) from Japan, Akihiro Matsumoto [et al.]

    • Taxonomic variability in the white-spotted whiprays (gerrardi-complex) of the genus Maculabatis Last, Naylor & Manjaji-Matsumoto 2016, B. Mabel Manjaji-Matsumoto [et al.]

    • Uncovering the status of Oceania's poorly-known endemic chondrichthyans, Peter Kyne [et al.]

    • Visual ecology of Indo-Pacific mobula rays, Betty Laglbauer [et al.]

    • Whale Shark (Rhincodon typus) Habitat Use at an Aggregation in the Saudi Arabian Red Sea, Royale Hardenstine [et al.]

  • D2/ Indo-Pacific Predators: Biology, ecology, conservation and management

    • First characterization of the Cookie-cutter sharks (Isistius sp.) predation pattern on different cetacean species in Martinique (FWI)., Virginie Scanga [et al.]

    • From sink to source: effects of declining fin demand on shark fishing livelihoods in Indonesia, Vanessa Jaiteh [et al.]

    • Genetic connectivity of a coastal apex predator: The population genetic structure reveals a potential spatial isolation of Fijian bull sharks, Kerstin Glaus [et al.]

    • Global genetic inventory of the Silky Shark (Carcharhinus falciformis), the shark finning industry, and DNA fingerprinting, Derek Kraft

    • Ground truthing dermal denticles to characterize shark assemblages on Palmyra Atoll, Erin Dillon [et al.]

    • How does a shark's paradise become a fish's nightmare? Ecology and behaviour of reef sharks at Fakarava, one of the world's biggest aggregations., Johann Mourier [et al.]

    • Indo-Pacific Predatory Fish Out of Context: Lionfish Invasion of Atlantic Coral Reefs, Mark Hixon

    • Insights into genetic chaos among tuna species in the Western and Central Pacific Ocean, Giulia Anderson [et al.]

    • Life history aspects and taxonomy of deep-sea chondrichthyans in the Southwestern Indian Ocean, Paul Clerkin [et al.]

    • Long term stability of a protected coral trout population, has it reached the carrying capacity?, Michael Kingsford [et al.]

    • Mako shark movements and habitat use in the southwest Pacific Ocean, Malcolm Francis [et al.]

    • Population Structure and Connectivity of Swordfish (Xiphias gladius L.) in the Pacific and Indian Oceans, Brad Smith [et al.]

    • Project AIRSHIP: Spotting sharks and rays using blimp-mounted cameras for conservation and human safety, Kye Adams [et al.]

    • Protected areas preserve natural behaviour of a targeted predatory fish species on coral reefs, Brock Bergseth [et al.]

    • Public Safety Implications, Ecological Impacts and Sustainability of Shark Cage-Diving Ecotourism in Hawaii., Carl Meyer

    • Safe haven: a mark recapture study reveals fast growth rates and long-term residency patterns in a multi-species shark nursery, Ornella Weideli [et al.]

    • Saving Devils: The Global Mobulid Conservation Programme, Isabel Ender

    • Shark Search Indo-Pacific: documenting the diversity, status and significance of sharks and rays, Andrew Chin [et al.]

    • Shark fins: high-value commodities or survival products?, Sara Busilacchi [et al.]

    • Sharks and rays in French Polynesia: A review of species diversity, status, life history, and fishing pressure assembled from diverse data sources, Lisa Stevenson [et al.]

    • Sharks, Culture and Conservation: Recognizing the value of Indigenous knowledge and cultural dimensions of Sharks and Rays, Karin Gerhardt [et al.]

    • Spatial and temporal distributions of coastal shark populations at the Galapagos Marine Reserve, David Acuna [et al.]

    • The extinction risk status of New Zealand sharks, rays, and chimaeras, Brit Finucci [et al.]

    • The life history of six pelagic sharks from Papua New Guinea, Brooke D'alberto [et al.]

    • Understanding and quantifying shark depredation in a recreational fishery in Ningaloo Marine Park, Western Australia, Jonathan Mitchell [et al.]

    • What Are They Doing Down There: An Investigation of Multiple Paternity in a Deep-Sea Shark, Melissa Nehmens [et al.]

  • E1/ Diadromous fish of the Indo Pacific: Biogeography, ecology and conservation

    • Bullied bullies: Competition shifts dietary niches in Gobiomorphus cotidianus, Marine Richarson

    • Complex patterns of population connectivity in a New Zealand amphidromous galaxiid, Jason Augspurger [et al.]

    • Conservation and management of New Zealand's diadromous galaxias, Jane Goodman [et al.]

    • Diadromous migratory pattern of freshwater fish on Sado Island, northern Japan, Midori Iida [et al.]

    • Different population structures among amphidromous gobies result from different life histories, Ken Maeda [et al.]

    • Distribution and early life history of anguillid eel leptocephali in the tropical western Pacific and South Pacific Ocean, Mari Kuroki [et al.]

    • Evolution of Diadromy: ''Migratory Pendulum Theory'', Katsumi Tsukamoto [et al.]

    • Evolution of Freshwater Amphidromy: its Origin and Process, Shun Watanabe [et al.]

    • Indo-Pacific clinging goby (Sicyopterus) mouth morphology: evolutionary point of view based on mitogenomic phylogeny., Clara Lord [et al.]

    • Legacy effects of marine larval development for a diadromous fish species, Mike Hickford [et al.]

    • Phylogeography of Eleotris fusca (Teleostei: Gobioidei: Eleotridae) in the Indo-Pacific area reveals a cryptic species in the Indian Ocean, Marion Mennesson

    • Spatial distribution, trophic ecology and growth of three tropical eel species (Anguilla marmorata, A. megastoma and A. obscura) living in sympatry in Gaua island (Vanuatu Archipelago), Anthony Acou [et al.]

    • Spatio-temporal variability of leptocephali trophic networks in the South Pacific Ocean, Aurélie Dessier [et al.]

    • Spawning Areas and Larval Dispersal and Recruitment Strategies of Anguillid eels in the Indo-Pacific, Michael Miller [et al.]

    • Temporal dynamics of the recruitment of three eel species in French Polynesia, Herehia Helme

    • The leptocephalus larvae/marine snow food-web theory: pros, cons and uncertainties after 20 years of investigations in the Indo-Pacific., Eric Feunteun [et al.]

  • E2/ Cryptobenthic fishes: Ecology and evolution of the smallest marine vertebrates

    • A wonderful radiation of cryptobenthic clingfishes along Australia's Southern Coast, Kevin Conway [et al.]

    • Coral-Gobies as a Model System for Understanding the Evolution and Maintenance of Sociality, Marian Wong [et al.]

    • Cryptobenthic fishes: the final frontier of vertebrate biodiversity on coral reefs, Simon Brandl [et al.]

    • Hidden in plain sight: high cryptobenthic fish diversity on soft sediment habitats in Southeast Asia, Maarten De Brauwer [et al.]

    • Microhabitat association of cryptobenthic gobies (family Gobiidae) in the Central Red Sea, Emily Troyer [et al.]

    • Not just a flat face: the underappreciated role of blennies on coral reefs, Zoe Loffler [et al.]

    • Spatial patterns of cryptobenthic coral reef fishes in the Red Sea, Darren Coker [et al.]

  • E3/ Fishes of Mesophotic Coral Ecosystems in the Indo-Pacific

    • Ecological determinants of depth ranges in a coral-obligate reef fish and depth patterns in habitat disturbance: Are deep reefs a refuge?, Chancey Macdonald [et al.]

    • Mesophotic coral ecosystems are not a refuge for the shallow reef fauna, Luiz Rocha [et al.]

    • Reef fish communities from shallow to lower mesophotic coral ecosystems in the heart of the Coral Triangle, Hudson Pinheiro [et al.]

    • Taking a deeper look: Quantifying the differences in fish assemblages between shallow and mesophotic temperate rocky reefs., Joel Williams [et al.]

  • E4/ Biology and Evolution of deep-sea fishes

    • A different way of seeing colour using multiple rod visual pigments in deep-sea fishes, Fabio Cortesi [et al.]

    • A global biogeographic classification of the mesopelagic zone, Tracey Sutton [et al.]

    • Distribution, population relationships and genetic diversity of Antimora spp. (Moridae, Gadiformes) in the world's oceans, Alexei Orlov [et al.]

    • Estimates of divergence times in the two monotypic genera of the family Anoplomatidae based on mitochondrial DNA sequences, Svetlana Orlova [et al.]

    • Functional biodiversity of New Zealand's marine fishes across depth, Elisabeth Myers [et al.]

    • Intensive sampling of the Gulf of Mexico reveals a global hotspot of meso- and bathypelagic fish biodiversity, April Cook [et al.]

    • Monophyly and Phylogenetic Relationships of the Family Chiasmodontidae (Teleostei: Scombriformes), Marcelo Melo

    • New records of the distribution of four grenadier fishes of the genus Macrourus (Gadiformes: Macrouridae) in the southeast Atlantic and west Indian Ocean sectors of the Southern Ocean based on genetic and morphological analyses of samples from the toothfish longline fishery, Peter Mcmillan [et al.]

    • Progress on the taxonomy and systematics of three Indo-Pacific fish genera, Ofer Gon [et al.]

    • The exceptional visual solution of the pearlsides (Sternoptychidae) to optimize vision in twilight conditions., Fanny De Busserolles [et al.]

  • F1/ Causes and consequences of change for macroalgae-associated fishes

    • Algal herbivory dynamics of fish across habitats in a shallow tropical seascape, Maria Eggertsen [et al.]

    • Edge effects on seaweed- and seagrass browsing within a tropical seascape, Charlotte Berkström [et al.]

    • From food web to biotic interactions: positive effects of reef fishes in kelp habitats, Alejandro Perez Matus

    • Juvenile fish resources and nursery function of macroalgal beds in Hong Kong waters – a habitat-based study, Priscilla To-Yan Leung [et al.]

    • Living on the edge - grazing activity along macrophyte patches, Carolina åkerlund [et al.]

    • Macroalgae habitat complexity underpins tropical fish biodiversity, replenishment and productivity, Christopher Fulton [et al.]

    • Macroalgal identity drives rates of herbivory and the structure of fish assemblages within a tropical East African seascape, Dinorah Chacin [et al.]

    • Spatially varying influence of canopy height on the functional role of seaweed and seagrass beds as nursery habitats, Linda Eggertsen

    • Structural connectivity and local habitat quality shape fish community structure across a patchy tropical seascape, Joshua Van Lier [et al.]

    • The best of a bad situation: invasive kelp acts as partial functional replacement for native kelp for fishes on degraded urban reefs, Luke Barrett [et al.]

    • The importance of tropical seaweed beds as fish habitats in the Western Indian Ocean, Stina Tano [et al.]

    • The influence of ENSO and seaweed habitat on patterns of fish recruitment, Shaun Wilson [et al.]

  • F2/ Climate change and high CO2 effects on fishes: Moving from individual to community level effects

    • A trade-off between behavioral and physiological performance could limit adaptation to the combined effects of warming and ocean acidification in a reef fish, Taryn Laubenstein [et al.]

    • An interplay between plasticity, epigenetics, and parental phenotype determines impacts of ocean acidification on a reef fish, Celia Schunter [et al.]

    • Anxious about ocean acidification? Elevated carbon dioxide produces varied responses on fish anxiety-like behaviour in different species, Trevor Hamilton [et al.]

    • Are all tropical fishes that occur in Japanese temperate reefs tropical vagrants?, Yohei Nakamura [et al.]

    • Boosted food web productivity through ocean acidification collapses under warming, Silvan Goldenberg [et al.]

    • Boundary current drives synchronous growth of marine fishes across tropical and temperate latitudes, Joyce Ong [et al.]

    • CO2-induced freshwater and seawater acidification affects early growth, metabolism, olfaction and behavior in juvenile pink salmon (Oncorhynchus gorbuscha)., Colin Brauner [et al.]

    • Climate change drives marine food web collapse through altered trophic flows and cyanobacterial proliferation, Hadayet Ullah [et al.]

    • Contribution of nuclear applications to better understand the effects of climate change and high CO2 on fishes, Marc Metian [et al.]

    • Diel CO2 cycles reduce severity of behavioural abnormalities in coral reef fish under ocean acidification, Michael Jarrold [et al.]

    • El Niño drives habitat filtering and widespread disease in the Galapagos marine fish assemblage, Robert Lamb [et al.]

    • Farming converts CO2 emissions into population growth by boosting crop production, Camilo Ferreira [et al.]

    • Geographic distributions and assemblages of Labrids along the south west coast of Western Australian over the past decade, Jack Parker [et al.]

    • Impact of ocean acidification on the early development and C-start escape behaviour of marine medaka (Oryzias melastigma), Xiaojie Wang [et al.]

    • Integrating molecules and fossils reveal multiple diversification shifts in marine fishes during the Cenozoic, Dahiana Arcila [et al.]

    • Irreversible behavioural impairment of fish starts early: embryonic exposure to ocean acidification, Almendra Rodriguez-Dominguez [et al.]

    • Is pH compensation the root of all evil?, Martin Grosell [et al.]

    • Is there a global signature of biological change in marine hotspots?, John Morrongiello [et al.]

    • Molecular mechanisms underpinning intraspecific variation in response to short-term and developmental thermal stress, Heather Veilleux [et al.]

    • Spawning Aggregations Act as a Bottleneck Influencing Climate Change Impacts on a Critically Endangered Reef Fish, Rebecca Asch [et al.]

    • Species Interactions Drive Fish Biodiversity Loss in a High-CO2 World, Ivan Nagelkerken [et al.]

    • The Balancing Act in Future Acidic Oceans: Protection of pH During Elevated CO2 Exposure Leads to Tradeoffs and Downstream Consequences in Marine Fish, Rachael Heuer [et al.]

    • The Impact of Change Climate on Nearshore Coral Reef Fisheries in American Samoa, Domingo Ochavillo

    • Trophic transfer of essential elements in the clownfish Amphiprion ocellaris in the context of ocean acidification, Hugo Jacob [et al.]

    • Warming has a greater effect than ocean acidification on the early life history development and swimming performance of a coastal pelagic fish, Seriola lalandi, Philip Munday [et al.]

  • F3/ Phenotypic plasticity and adaptation to anthropogenic environmental changes

    • Differential impacts of climate-driven expansion of dead-zones on the vertical ecology of top oceanic predators, Rui Rosa [et al.]

    • From desert to sea: mechanisms Arabian killifish use to acclimate to high salinities in the Red Sea, Lucrezia C. Bonzi [et al.]

    • Global patterns of intraspecific life-history variation reveal hierarchical importance of environmental drivers in widespread coral-reef fishes, Brett Taylor [et al.]

    • Impacts of anthropogenic noise on fish: individual effects, population consequences and mitigation, Andrew Radford [et al.]

    • It takes three to tango: global warming puts clownfish future in hot water, Suzanne Mills [et al.]

    • Latitudinal variation in behavioural patterns and social group structure of coral reef fishes, Paloma Matis [et al.]

    • Moderate rate of temperature increase leads to transgenerational differences in metabolic pathways in a coral reef fish, Moises Bernal [et al.]

    • Molecular basis of sex-dependent heritability of CO2 tolerance in a coral reef fish, Alison Monroe [et al.]

    • Neurobiological-induced breakdown of cleaning mutualisms under ocean warming and acidification, Jose Ricardo Paula [et al.]

    • Neurogenomic mechanisms of behavioural plasticity in fish: a conceptual framework illustrated by the ecological modulation of reproductive behavior in a blenny, Rui Oliveira [et al.]

    • The epigenetic landscape of transgenerational acclimation of a reef fish to ocean warming, Taewoo Ryu [et al.]

    • Timing is everything: developmental plasticity to ocean warming in a coral reef fish, Rachel Spinks [et al.]

    • Warming over three generations in a coral reef fish: how does temperature change across generations affect plasticity?, Jennifer Donelson [et al.]

    • You can't always get what you want: behavioural plasticity as a way for mobile coral reef fishes to buffer the effects of rising ocean temperatures?, Rebecca Fox [et al.]

  • F4/ Conservation physiology of Indo-Pacific fishes: Facing problems and finding solutions

    • A Protocol for Identifying Suitable Biomarkers to Assess Fish Health: a Systematic Review, Frederieke Kroon [et al.]

    • Dead tired: physiological exhaustion in neonatal reef sharks (Carcharhinus melanopterus and Negaprion acutidens) in nursery areas, Ian Bouyoucos [et al.]

    • How physiology can support the management and conservation of coral reef fishes, Björn Illing [et al.]

    • Marine protected areas provide species with physiological resilience to the impacts of climate change, Murray Duncan [et al.]

    • Mechanistic understanding of climate driven range shifts: using thermal tolerances of rock lobster to predict future range shifts, Samantha Twiname [et al.]

    • Physiology meets conservation: Challenges, success stories, and future directions in the Indo-Pacific, Jodie Rummer [et al.]

    • The responses of fish embryos to boat noise and finding solutions to underwater noise pollution., Sofia Jain-Schlaepfer [et al.]

  • G1/ Moving Forward by Looking Back: The Use of Time Series and Monitoring Data in Fish Ecology

    • Are fish statistically informative indicators for long-term monitoring of coral reef disturbances?, Simon Van Wynsberge [et al.]

    • Discovery of abundant fish otoliths in fossil coral reefs greatly extends monitoring of coral reef fishes, Aaron O'dea [et al.]

    • Ecological monitoring reveals the threat to coral reef fishes from climate-driven increases in cyclone intensity, Alistair Cheal [et al.]

    • Environmental DNA metabarcoding of marine coastal fish reflects long-term monitoring data based on underwater visual census, Reiji Masuda [et al.]

    • Herbivorous fish as drivers of the resilience of a Polynesian coral reef., Alizée Martin [et al.]

    • Long-term changes of the coral reef community in the WAKATOBI marine national park, south-east Sulawesi, Indonesia, Adam Gouraguine [et al.]

    • Longterm response of herbivores to a large-scale reduction in live coral cover; implications for reef resiliency, Andrew Brooks [et al.]

    • Status and trends of reef fishes of the Pacific, Charlotte Moritz [et al.]

    • What can long term monitoring of reef-associated fishes tell us about the drivers of their abundance and dynamics?, Russell Schmitt [et al.]

  • H1/ Management of coral reef’ social-ecological systems

    • A Biocultural Approach to Developing Indicators for Natural Resource Management, Eleanor Sterling [et al.]

    • A collaborative approach to integrate science into traditional management of coral reefs in Navakavu, Fiji, Leo Dutra [et al.]

    • Are coral reefs full of multi-coloured fish? Impact of an awareness campaign on the representations of coral reefs by children, Pascale Chabanet [et al.]

    • Citizen Science: using spot pattern technology to identify the threatened common seadragon Phyllopteryx taeniolatus in the Sydney region., Selma Klanten [et al.]

    • Comparative approach of hybrid governance in Polynesian's coral reef social-ecological systems, Pauline Fabre [et al.]

    • Coral reef conservation on the largest Brazilian MPA - Linking hybrid governance and social-ecological resilience, Pedro Pereira [et al.]

    • Disciplining Hybrid Governance: Assessing Disciplinary Interference in Biocultural Indicators for Socio-Ecological Resilience, Alexander Mawyer

    • How MMSY promotes sustainability in coral ecosystem facing environmental chocks, Adrien Lagarde

    • Linking terrestrial causes of disturbances to coral reef health: socio-ecological modeling of Kenting National Park (Taiwan) in the context of climate change., Lauriane Ribas-Deulofeu [et al.]

    • Operationalizing Ecological Adaptive Capacity to assess Impacts, Resilience, and Action for Coral Reefs in the Face of Global Environmental Change, Adrien Comte [et al.]

  • H2/ The status and opportunities of marine wildlife tourism

    • A global review of elasmobranch tourism activities, risks and management approaches, Teleah Healy [et al.]

    • Assessing the dietary effects of white shark cage-diving on target and non-target species using fatty acid profiling, Lauren Meyer [et al.]

    • Dive tourists' demand for shark conservation: A travel cost and contingent behavior study, Johanna Zimmerhackel [et al.]

    • Fact or fiction? Influences of fish-feeding activities on fishes and reefs– an application of eco-tourism in coral reefs, Colin Wen [et al.]

    • Site fidelity of tiger shark Galeocerdo cuvier in a feeding site for ecotourism purpose off Tahiti (French Polynesia - East Pacific), Eric Clua [et al.]

    • To feed or not to feed? Artificial feeding affects coral reef fish functions (Aitutaki, Cook Islands), Natalie Prinz [et al.]

  • H3/ Ciguatera fish poisoning in the Indo-Pacific region

    • Applicability of the fluorescent Receptor Binding Assay (RBAf) to the detection of Ciguatoxins in Pacific reef fish., Taiana Darius [et al.]

    • Application of Solid Phase Adsorption Toxin Tracking (SPATT) devices for an improved Ciguatera Fish Poisoning (CFP) risk assessment, Mélanie Roué [et al.]

    • Ciguatera fish poisoning in the South Pacific: implementation of a regional surveillance network (CIGUA-WATCH PROJECT), Clémence Gatti [et al.]

    • Ciguatoxic dinoflagellate densities and the effects of algal biomass and species composition in a Pacific coral reef, Amy Briggs [et al.]

    • Distribution and diversity of Gambierdiscus spp. and associated levels of ciguatoxins in herbivorous fish from a ciguatera-endemic area in the Cook Islands, Kirsty Smith [et al.]

    • Distributions and toxin production of Gambierdiscus and Fukuyoa spp. in the Kingdom of Tonga, Phoebe Argyle [et al.]

    • Effects of ciguatoxins accumulation in fish, Mireille Chinain [et al.]

    • Experimental evidence of ciguatoxin continued bioaccumulation in an herbivorous coral reef fish, Rachel Clausing [et al.]

    • Identification of Poisonous Fish in Various I Qoliqoli and its Treatment in Fiji, Nanise Tuqiri

    • LC-MS analysis of ciguatoxins from Variola louti collected off the Japanese Waters, Naomasa Oshiro [et al.]

    • Managing the risk of Ciguatera Fish Poisoning in temperate Australia, Michaela E. Larsson [et al.]

    • The risk of ciguatera fish poisoning to New Zealand and its territorial waters and a molecular approach to monitoring, Lesley Rhodes [et al.]

    • Towards a transcriptomic signature of long-term CTX exposure in naso brevirostris, Gregory Nuel [et al.]

    • Understanding the complexities associated with the chemical analysis of ciguatoxins, Sam Murray [et al.]

  • I1/ Women in Marine Sciences in the Indo-Pacific

    • A Climate for Change, Gretta Pecl

    • Bridging science and art: The importance of visually interpreting and communicating science, Sofia Jain-Schlaepfer [et al.]

    • Encouraging Women Scientists to Support Marine Research in Indonesia, Ni Kadek Dita Cahyani

    • Field surveys, research, and outreach activities for public awareness of the conservation of diadromous fishes, Mari Kuroki

    • From cows to marine fishes: discovering anglerfishes, engaging with Indigenous communities, and becoming a leader to female students in STEM, Rachel Arnold

    • From the tropics to the subantarctic islands: using stereo-baited remote underwater video systems to understand fish ecology and functional diversity, Elisabeth Myers

    • Gendered differences in authorship patterns in tropical fish biology, Cynthia Riginos

    • Home is where the shark is, Ornella Weideli

    • Marine science: a life of adventure?, Emily Fobert

    • Marine taxonomist: My Dream, My Journey, Yonela Sithole

    • Ocean-locked: How a girl from the heartland became a marine biologist in the heart of the Pacific, Lillian Tuttle

    • Océane, when the name fits the job, Océane Salles

    • Researching the role of marine parks on the Great Barrier Reef: a career overview, April Hall

    • The journey of a latina woman across the Pacific, Maria Del Mar Palacios

    • Today's women in marine science: diverse leaders, passionate and dynamic communicators, Jodie Rummer

    • What would you do if you weren't afraid?, Isabel Ender

    • White privilege and haole guilt: The advantages and pitfalls of fitting the best-worst stereotype in science, Giulia Anderson

    • Women in Marine Sciences_Shirleen Bala_ Fiji Islands, Shirleen Bala

  • I2/ Systematic, Taxonomy, Biology, and Ecology of marine and freshwater fishes

    • A Possible Artificial Intelligence Ecosystem Avatar: the Moorea case (IDEA), Jean-Pierre Barriot [et al.]

    • A new family and genus proposed for an undescribed Japanese species of the suborder Zoarcoidei, Gento Shinohara [et al.]

    • Addressing common criticisms of studies of sexual selection on females using a natural population of live-bearing fish., Michael Izumiyama [et al.]

    • An undescribed species of the genus Pherallodichthys (Gobiesocidae) from southern Japan, Kyoji Fujiwara [et al.]

    • Assessing functional diversity and food web architecture on central Pacific coral reefs with a compound-specific carbon stable isotope approach, Simon Thorrold [et al.]

    • Cryptical sex change as a mating tactic in a coral dwelling polygynous damselfish Dascyllus reticulatus, Rei Sakanoue [et al.]

    • DNA barcoding of the family Sparidae along the coast of China and revelation of cryptic diversity in the Indo-West Pacific oceans based on COI and 16S rRNA genes, Liu Jing [et al.]

    • Enhancing FishNet2 through FishBase-OBIS Collaboration, Nelson Rios [et al.]

    • Fish Barcode of Life in Argentina, Juan Diaz De Astarloa

    • Fish assemblage structures and environmental conditions in small tidal creeks and tide pools in a mangrove estuary, Kusuto Nanjo [et al.]

    • Food web structure analysis of riverine fish community in middle stream of the Ano River, central Japan, Taiga Yodo [et al.]

    • Freshwater Fishes of China: species diversity, distribution and conservation, Yahui Zhao [et al.]

    • How many fishes are there in the NZ region and how many can be identified? Recent figures may be 700 species short, Clive Roberts [et al.]

    • Integrative research on body nutrition and population density of Chinese marine fishes, Wenhua Xiong

    • Latitudinal variation in life history traits of Meuschenia scaber (Monacanthidae), Valerio Visconti [et al.]

    • Metapopulation as ''Ichthyological Conservation Unit'' for freshwater fishes, Kazumi Hosoya

    • Molecular evidence of several marine fish hybridization cases in the Indo-Pacific region, Song He [et al.]

    • Naturally occurring hybrids of coral reef butterflyfishes have similar fitness compared to parental species, Stefano Montanari [et al.]

    • Paleo-Drainage Basin Connectivity Predicts Evolutionary Relationships Across Three Southeast Asian Biodiversity Hotspots, Mark De Bruyn [et al.]

    • Phylogeography of the ‘Barbus' paludinosus species complex across Indian Ocean drainages and endorheic rivers of East Africa, Henry Bart [et al.]

    • Preliminary study on the species, distribution, and abundance of freshwater eels, genus Anguilla inhabiting rivers in Samoa, Shozo Yamamoto [et al.]

    • Relationship between otolith Sr/Ca ratio and salinity in western mosquitofish by aquarium experiment, Mariko Takashima [et al.]

    • Sex change, mating system, and effect of population density in reef fish, Tetsuo Kuwamura [et al.]

    • Species composition and assemblages of ichthyoplankton during summer in the East China Sea, Han-Yang Lin [et al.]

    • Strict pair-bond and stable territories of the vagabond butterflyfish, Chaetodon vagabundus performing spawning migration, Azusa Endo [et al.]

    • Subsea petrochemical infrastructure is influencing the abundance and diversity of fish in northern Australia, Todd Bond [et al.]

    • Taxonomic and ecological studies on Abudefduf caudobimaculatus and Abudefduf vaigiensis (Perciformes: Pomacentridae), Kunto Wibowo [et al.]

    • Taxonomic revision of shallow-water tonguefishes (Pleuronectiformes: Cynoglossidae: Symphurus) from marine waters of the tropical Indo-Pacific, Thomas Munroe [et al.]

    • The importance of habitat connectivity and structure on fish biodiversity and assemblages within Samoan mangroves, Joseph Percival [et al.]

    • Three-dimensional structure, sand particle distribution and building simulation of the ‘mystery circle' constructed by a pufferfish Torquigener albomaculosus (Tetraodontidae), Hiroshi Kawase [et al.]

    • Tidal pool fish diversity of Jeju Island, Korea, Hyuck Joon Kwun [et al.]

  • Author Index

  • List of the Participants

  • List of sponsors

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