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Recolonisation and recruitment of fishes to intertidal rockpools at Wellington, New Zealand
Authors:Trevor J Willis  Clive D Roberts
Institution:(1) Island Bay Marine Laboratory, Victoria University of Wellington, 396-402 The Esplanade, Island Bay, Wellington, New Zealand;(2) Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa, P.O. Box 467, Wellington, New Zealand;(3) Present address: Leigh Marine Laboratory, University of Auckland, P.O. Box 349, Warkworth, New Zealand
Abstract:Synopsis A study of recolonisation of rockpools by intertidal fishes on the Wellington south coast, New Zealand, found the assemblage to be resilient and seasonally stable. A total of 26 species from nine families were recorded, dominated by the Tripterygiidae (triplefins) and Gobiesocidae (clingfishes). A pattern of alternating species dominance occurred, with the triplefinsBellapiscis medius andForsterygion lapillum being numerically dominant in summer, but becoming less common in winter and replaced as dominants by the clingfishesTrachelochismus pinnulatus andGastroscyphus hectoris. Juvenile recruits of eleven species occurred in the samples from spring to early summer, however only the aforementioned four species recruit to the intertidal zone in large numbers. The speed of rockpool recolonisation by fishes after extractive sampling is seasonally dependent, being quicker in the summer than winter. In general, recolonisation takes at least one month, but probably fewer than three. While stochastic factors influence assemblage composition in the short term, overall regulation of the fish assemblage of rockpools appears to be primarily deterministic, resulting in an essentially predictable taxonomic structure.
Keywords:Assemblage structure  Disturbance  Rockpool fishes  Resilience  Seasonal variability  Temperate reefs
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