Seascape connectivity of temperate fishes between estuarine nursery areas and open coastal reefs

While estuaries are considered valuable nurseries for many harvested fish species, little quantitative data exist about the spatial scales over which estuaries supply individuals to coastal reefs and how this influences coastal metapopulations. Quantifying this connectivity between estuaries and coa...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Journal of applied ecology 2022-05, Vol.59 (5), p.1406-1416
Hauptverfasser: Swadling, Daniel S., Knott, Nathan A., Taylor, Matthew D., Coleman, Melinda A., Davis, Andrew R., Rees, Matthew J.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:While estuaries are considered valuable nurseries for many harvested fish species, little quantitative data exist about the spatial scales over which estuaries supply individuals to coastal reefs and how this influences coastal metapopulations. Quantifying this connectivity between estuaries and coastal reefs will assist the sustainable management of fisheries and key fish habitat. This information is particularly pertinent considering estuaries world‐wide are experiencing degradation and habitat loss. We examine how the relative abundance and body length of three exploited fishes (Chrysophrys auratus, Pseudocaranx georgianus and Nemadactylus douglasii) varied in relation to the proximity and size of the nearest estuary, predicting that estuarine dependent species (i.e. C. auratus) would be smaller and more abundant on reefs close to large estuaries. As a network of ‘no‐take’ marine reserves exist across the study area, we also assessed for reserve effects and if these were influenced by the proximity and size of estuaries. Fish assemblages were surveyed using baited remote underwater video systems deployed on 629 rocky reefs across 417 km of coastline in south‐eastern Australia. As predicted, C. auratus were smaller and more abundant on reefs adjacent to estuaries (
ISSN:0021-8901
1365-2664
DOI:10.1111/1365-2664.14157