# Long-term effects of a severe tropical cyclone on coral reef habitat and fish assemblages at the Whitsunday Islands, central Great Barrier Reef

**Authors:** Maya Srinivasan, Gemma F. Galbraith, Daniela M. Ceccarelli, Benjamin J. Cresswell, Sina J. Strähl, David H. Williamson

PMC · DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0329995 · PLOS One · 2026-02-25

## TL;DR

A severe cyclone in 2017 caused long-term damage to coral reefs and fish populations at the Whitsunday Islands, with little recovery over five years.

## Contribution

This study provides long-term data showing persistent declines in coral and fish assemblages after a severe cyclone.

## Key findings

- Hard coral cover declined by 69% and 37% for complex and massive corals, respectively, with no recovery after five years.
- Butterflyfish and damselfish densities and species richness dropped significantly after the cyclone and remained low.
- Fish species shifted from coral-dependent to macroalgal and rubble-associated species over time.

## Abstract

Coral reef habitats and associated fish communities can be severely impacted by physical disturbances such as storms and cyclones, which can dramatically reduce live coral cover. However, rapid coral recolonisation and growth can lead to short-term recovery of both coral and fish assemblages. Here we examine the impact of a category 4 cyclone at the Whitsunday Islands (Cyclone Debbie in 2017). Changes in hard coral cover and the density, species richness and species composition of butterflyfishes and damselfishes were assessed over a 12-year period: 3 surveys prior to the cyclone (2012, 2014 and 2016), two surveys 8–19 months after (2017 and 2018) and another two surveys 5–6 years later (2022 and 2023). The percent cover of complex corals and massive/encrusting corals declined by 69% and 37% respectively between the pre-cyclone period and the two 8–19 months after the cyclone, with no significant recovery 5–6 years later. Density and species richness of both butterflyfishes and damselfishes declined significantly immediately after the cyclone, and these declines continued 5–6 years on. There was a shift in species composition in both fish families from a dominance of coral dependent species prior to the cyclone towards a dominance of macroalgal and rubble associated species. Species-level patterns were examined for the most abundant butterflyfish and damselfish species surveyed, and all but one species suffered long-term declines in density ranging from 31% to 85% over the period 2016–2023. The immediate and long-term declines included fishes both reliant and not reliant on live coral for habitat/food. Our study indicates that severe tropical cyclones can lead to short- and long-term declines in coral and fish assemblages, and rapid recovery should not be assumed. Given the potential for an increase in the frequency of severe cyclones with climate change, continued long-term monitoring is essential to examine the cumulative decadal effects of these disturbances.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** coral loss (MESH:D016388), coral damage (MESH:D020263)
- **Chemicals:** Cyclone Debbie (-)
- **Species:** Pomacentrus brachialis (charcoal damsel, species) [taxon 161913], Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606], Pomacentrus lepidogenys (scaly damsel, species) [taxon 229133], Chaetodon aureofasciatus (golden butterflyfish, species) [taxon 109683], Chromis chromis (damselfish, species) [taxon 91607], Pomacentrus moluccensis (lemon damsel, species) [taxon 80956], Pomacentrus wardi (Ward's damsel, species) [taxon 521273], Chaetodon baronessa (eastern triangular butterflyfish, species) [taxon 109685], Chaetodontidae (butterflyfishes, family) [taxon 30828], Chrysiptera rollandi (Rolland's demoiselle, species) [taxon 196128], Neopomacentrus azysron (yellow-tail demoiselle, species) [taxon 80985], Pomacentrus nagasakiensis (Nagasaki damsel, species) [taxon 229136], PX clade (clade) [taxon 569578], Acanthochromis polyacanthus (spiny chromis, species) [taxon 80966], A. leucogaster [taxon 325337], Chromis nitida (barrier reef chromis, species) [taxon 229083], Pomacentrus amboinensis (Ambon damsel, species) [taxon 393602], Chaetodon rainfordi (Rainford's butterflyfish, species) [taxon 109704], Pantodontidae (butterflyfish, family) [taxon 8274], Chelmon rostratus (copperband butterflyfish, species) [taxon 109905], Acropora (staghorn corals, genus) [taxon 6127], Neopomacentrus bankieri (Chinese demoiselle, species) [taxon 1081382], Amblyglyphidodon leucogaster (yellowbelly damselfish, species) [taxon 229096], Amblyglyphidodon curacao (staghorn damselfish, species) [taxon 80968], Plectroglyphidodon apicalis (Australian gregory, species) [taxon 2891204], P. apicalis [taxon 219800]

## Full text

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## Figures

9 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12935271/full.md

## References

69 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12935271/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12935271