Healthy mangroves are needed to fight climate change on coral reef fisheries, research suggests.

The University of Queensland’s Professor Peter Mumby says corals have been bleached and reefs have lost their structural complexity as a major consequence of warming seas.

“Many people are worried that – due to climate change – reef fishery yields could halve if coral reefs flatten, losing the hiding places that support thousands of fish,” he said.

“When a young fish arrives at a degraded reef it has nowhere to hide and is easily targeted by predators.

“Of course, predators experience the same problem when they’re young, so the entire food web becomes unproductive and few fish survive.”

Despite the alarming trend, his research team has found mangroves provide a partial solution.

“We know that many reef fish can use mangroves as an alternative nursery habitat to the reef,” Professor Mumby said.

“Mangroves provide a calm, safe environment with plenty of food and allow fish to grow larger before heading out to the reef as adults.

“In fact, we discovered that these nurseries could support fisheries productivity that is equal to that in complex reefs that lack nurseries.”

Victoria University’s Dr Alice Rogers says reef fisheries management strategies should use such findings to protect areas now and into the future.

“Mangrove nurseries essentially allow some fish to sidestep the challenges of early life on a degraded reef,” she said.

“These fish then benefit by finding it relatively easy to find food because it has few places to hide.

“Mangrove restoration can be important, but in places where that’s impossible, future research might examine adapting structures to offer mangrove-like nursery functions.

“This would be in environments that either do not support natural mangrove forests or have too large a tidal range to provide stable nursery functions in coastal fringes.”

The study is accessible here.