Fish species redundancy in estuaries: A major conservation concern in temperate estuaries under global change pressures

Fish assemblages in estuaries have a much lower species richness (number of taxa) when compared with the combined numbers of freshwater and marine species from adjacent aquatic ecosystems. This is primarily because of the relatively harsh and fluctuating physico‐chemical conditions in estuaries comp...

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Veröffentlicht in:Aquatic conservation 2021-04, Vol.31 (4), p.979-983
Hauptverfasser: Whitfield, Alan K., Harrison, Trevor D.
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Fish assemblages in estuaries have a much lower species richness (number of taxa) when compared with the combined numbers of freshwater and marine species from adjacent aquatic ecosystems. This is primarily because of the relatively harsh and fluctuating physico‐chemical conditions in estuaries compared with the more stable freshwater and marine environments. A comprehensive fish survey of estuaries in South Africa is used as a basis to determine fish species richness in subtropical, warm temperate, and cool temperate systems along the coast, and to assess the degree of redundancy in the different biogeographic regions. In general, only one or two species belonging to each of the detritivorous, piscivorous, zoobenthivorous, and zooplanktivorous fish guilds are numerically well represented in the larger cool temperate estuaries, but between four and 10 species in each of these guilds are usually recorded in the larger subtropical estuaries. Although the overall low redundancy of fish species groups in estuaries has already been formally recognized in the literature, this short note highlights the sensitivity of certain trophic guilds in temperate South African estuaries to any form of redundancy, a characteristic that may be equally applicable, based on declining species richness with increasing latitude, to temperate estuaries in other parts of the world.
ISSN:1052-7613
1099-0755
DOI:10.1002/aqc.3482