Seasonal biomass and diversity of estuarine fishes coupled with tropical habitat heterogeneity (southern Gulf of Mexico) |
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Authors: | A. Yå ñ ez-Arancibia,A. L. Lara-Dominguez,J. L. Rojas-Galaviz,P. Så nchez-Gil,J. W. Day,Jr C. J. Madden |
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Affiliation: | Instituto de Ciencias del Mary Limnologia, UNA M Apartado Postal 70-305, 04510 Mexico, DF;Coastal Ecology Institute, Center for Wetland Resources Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge, LA 70803–7503, U.S.A. |
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Abstract: | Nekton dynamics were studied in two contrasting habitats in Terminos Lagoon, Mexico. Over an annual cycle, a total of 83 fish species used the high-salinity fringing mangrove/ Thalassia testudinum habitat and biomass ranged from 0.43 to 3.43 g m−2. The highest biomass occurred during the dry season when aquatic primary production was highest (i.e. 333 g C m−2 year−1). By contrast, 65 species used the freshwater and low-salinity riverine mangrove/Crassostrea virginica/Vallisneria habitat and biomass ranged from 0.57 to 1.48 g m−2 with the highest biomass occurring during the wet season, the time of highest primary production in this habitat (i.e. 219 g C m−2 year−1). The high- and low-salinity habitats serve as ecological bridges between freshwater areas and the sea. Fish life histories have evolved to utilize these habitats for spawning, feeding and nursery grounds in a manner which generally leads to the use of different habitats during the periods of highest primary productivity. |
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