- Social context is a critical yet underexplored determinant of behavioural resilience to climate change. Group living can buffer individuals against environmental stress through enhanced vigilance, reduced predation risk and improved foraging efficiency.
- However, whether these behavioural expressions persist under chronic (warming, acidification) and acute (marine heatwaves) climate stressors remains unclear. Using natural climate analogues spanning present-day, ocean warming and combined warming–acidification reefs, we quantified how shoal size influences behavioural expression in a range-extending reef fish (Pomacentrus coelestis).
- Across all climate conditions, fish in larger shoals consistently exhibited higher foraging and activity levels and reduced risk-avoidance behaviours, whereas direct effects of warming, acidification and heatwaves on behaviour were negligible.
- In contrast, ocean acidification most likely constrained collective behaviour indirectly by simplifying benthic habitats, where fish densities were 84% lower than at the warming reef, resulting in shoals that were up to 79% smaller than the Warming and Control reefs.
- Combined, our data suggest that shoal size mediates behavioural expression between foraging and predator avoidance and that acidification-driven habitat simplification can alter behavioural expression indirectly by reducing fish densities and the formation of large shoals.
- We conclude that climate change can indirectly modify behavioural expression in shoal-forming fishes through habitat-driven erosion of social structure.
Mitchell A., Connell S. D., Hart M. E., Harvey B. P., Agostini S., Spatafora D., Izumiyama M., Booth D. J., Ravasi T. & Nagelkerken I., in press. Ocean acidification, more than warming or heatwaves, constrains shoaling behaviour in a range-extending fish through habitat simplification. Journal of Animal Ecology. Article.



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