Fish nearshore habitat-use patterns as ecological indicators of nursery quality

[Display omitted] •A novel approach to analyse continuous microchemical information from fish otoliths.•Comparison of archaeological and present-day otoliths elicits habitat quality.•Pre-industrial anthropogenic stressors had little effect on snapper migration.•Modern anthropogenic disturbances lead...

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Veröffentlicht in:Ecological indicators 2021-11, Vol.131, p.108225, Article 108225
Hauptverfasser: Sabetian, Armagan, Zhang, Jingjing, Campbell, Matthew, Walter, Richard, Allen, Hamish, Reid, Malcolm, Wijenayake, Kavindra, Lilkendey, Julian
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:[Display omitted] •A novel approach to analyse continuous microchemical information from fish otoliths.•Comparison of archaeological and present-day otoliths elicits habitat quality.•Pre-industrial anthropogenic stressors had little effect on snapper migration.•Modern anthropogenic disturbances lead to disrupted nursery habitat-use patterns. Anthropogenic factors have been identified as major stressors of nearshore environments such as estuaries, sea grass meadows and mangroves. We hypothesize that aquatic organisms functionally dependent on these habitats as nurseries respond to disturbances with subtle changes in their habitat-use patterns. We used a novel approach coupling behavioural change point analysis with fish otolith microchemistry to analyse continuous life history information independent of climate and physiological variability. Here we show that pre-industrial (1430–1640 CE) land use and fishing practices had little influence on the well synchronized migration behaviour of juvenile snapper Chrysophrys auratus in the Hauraki Gulf, New Zealand. In contrast, modern human disturbances have resulted in snapper spending less time in brackish nurseries and moving chaotically between habitats. Today, nearshore habitats have largely lost their nursery function for the species. Temporal comparison of habitat-use patterns is a powerful tool to evaluate past and present nursery habitat quality.
ISSN:1470-160X
1872-7034
DOI:10.1016/j.ecolind.2021.108225