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Environmental influences on the replenishment of lizardfish (family Synodontidae) in Caribbean Panama
Authors:T. Lemberget   M. I. McCormick  D. T. Wilson
Affiliation:(1) ARC Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies, School of Marine and Tropical Biology, James Cook University, Townsville, QLD, 4811, Australia;(2) Fisheries and Marine Science Program, Bureau of Rural Sciences, GPO Box 858, Canberra, ACT, 2601, Australia
Abstract:
Lizardfish (family Synodontidae) are little studied despite their potentially important predatory role in epibenthic coral reef communities. The present study documented the temporal and spatial larval supply patterns of five Caribbean lizardfish species together with environmental variables (solar radiation, rainfall, water temperature, onshore-offshore winds, alongshore winds and wind-induced turbulence) to examine: (1) whether species within the same family respond differently to their developmental environment and (2) if larval supply in year-round warm waters is influenced by climatic changes. To address these questions, late-stage larvae of Synodus foetens, Synodus intermedius, Synodus poeyi, Saurida suspicio and Saurida brasiliensis were collected in replicate light traps in three different reef habitats (back-reef, lagoon and exposed) in the San Blas Archipelago, Panama, over 18 consecutive lunar months. Although replenishment of lizardfish occurred year-round, the temporal and spatial supply patterns were species-specific: Sfoetens, Sintermedius and Spoeyi were most abundant during the dry season while Ssuspicio and Sbrasiliensis were most prevalent during the wet season. When seasons were analysed separately, water temperature explained 39 and 26% of the variance in light trap catches of Sfoetens and Sintermedius, respectively, in the dry season while wind-induced turbulence accounted for 25% of the variability in Ssuspicio and Sbrasiliensis catches during the wet season. These findings stress the importance of analysing larval supply in conjunction with environmental data at a high taxonomic resolution to better understand the mechanisms that drive replenishment in reef systems at low latitudes.
Keywords:Recruitment  Supply  Larvae  Temperature  Turbulence  Coral reef
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