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Variation with depth in temperate seagrass-associated fish assemblages in Southern Victoria, Australia

journal contribution
posted on 2014-07-01, 00:00 authored by N Hutchinson, G Jenkins, A Brown, Timothy Smith
Variability in the abundance and distribution of seagrass-associated fish assemblages was examined at different depths in a temperate bay in southern Australia. Depth differences in seagrass-associated fish assemblages are poorly known but this information is critical given that seagrass loss can occur at specific depths depending on the cause. Overall, 69 species of fish from 26 families were recorded, with higher species richness in shallow than deep beds, with 12 species found only in deep beds and 22 species found only in shallow beds. While the total fish abundance (i.e. abundance of all species recorded) varied between years and seasons, and to some extent between sites, it was significantly higher in shallow than deep seagrass beds in the majority of cases. Although there was some variation between sites, seagrass tended to be longer and have a higher biomass in shallow than deep beds during both spring and autumn throughout the study. A positive relationship between seagrass biomass/length and total fish abundance/species richness was apparent. Assemblage structure tended to be distinct at each depth, with the largest species recorded in shallow seagrass. Large numbers of small schooling fish, such as atherinids, dominated in shallow seagrass but were not found in deep seagrass. Loss of seagrass could therefore have varying implications for distinct assemblages found at different depths.

History

Journal

Estuaries and coasts

Volume

37

Issue

4

Pagination

801 - 814

Publisher

Springer

Location

Berlin, Germany

ISSN

1559-2731

eISSN

1559-2723

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2013, Springer