Juvenile fish assemblages collected on unconsolidated sediments of the southeast United States continental shelf
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Date
2006
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Patterns were investigated in juvenile fish use of unconsolidated sediments on the southeast United States continental shelf off Georgia. Juvenile fish and environmental data were sampled at ten stations along a110-km cross-shelf transect, including four stations surrounding Gray’s Reef National Marine Sanctuary (Gray’sReef NMFS). Cross-shelf stations were sampled approximately quarterly from spring 2000 to winter 2002. Additional stations were sampled on three transects inshore of Gray’s Reef NMS and four transects offshore of the Sanctuary during three cruises to investigate along-shelf patterns inthe juvenile fish assemblages. Samples were collected in beam trawls, and 121 juvenile taxa, of which 33 were reef-associated species, were identified. Correspondence analysison untransformed juvenile fish abundance indicated a cross-shelf gradient in assemblages, and the station groupings and assemblages varied seasonally. During the spring,fall, and winter, three cross-shelf regions were identified: inner-shelf, mid-shelf, and outer-shelf regions. In the summer, the shelf consisted of a single juvenile fish assemblage. Water depth was the primary environmental variable correlated with cross-shelfassemblages. However, salinity, density, and water column stratification also correlated with the distributionof assemblages during the spring, fall, and winter, and along with temperature likely influenced the distributionof juvenile fish. No along-shelf spatial patterns were found in the juvenile fish assemblages, but the along-shelf dimension sampled was small (~60 km). Our results revealedthat a number of commercially and recreationally important species used unconsolidated sediments on the shelf off Georgia as juvenile habitat. We conclude that management efforts would be improved through a greater recognition of the importance of these habitats to fish production and theinterconnectedness of multiple habitats in the southeast U.S. continental shelf ecosystem.Journal
Fishery BulletinVolume
104Page Range
256-277Resource/Dataset Location
http://fishbull.noaa.govCollections