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Contrasting effects of mangroves and armoured shorelines on fish assemblages in tropical estuarine seascapes

journal contribution
posted on 2019-11-19, 00:00 authored by CJ Henderson, BL Gilby, TA Schlacher, RM Connolly, M Sheaves, Nicole FlintNicole Flint, HP Borland, AD Olds
Coastal seascapes are composed of a diversity of habitats that are linked in space and time by the movement of organisms. The context and configuration of coastal ecosystems shapes many important properties of animal assemblages, but potential seascape effects of natural and artificial habitats on nearby habitats are typically considered in isolation. We test whether, and how, the seascape context of natural and urban habitats modified fish assemblages across estuaries. Fish were sampled with underwater videos in five habitat types (mangroves, rock bars, log snags, unvegetated sediments, armoured shorelines) in 17 estuaries in eastern Australia. Different habitats supported distinct fish assemblages, but the spatial context of mangroves and armoured shorelines had pervasive ecological effects that extended across entire estuaries. In most estuarine habitats, fish diversity and abundance was greatest when they were in close proximity of mangroves, and decreased due to the proximity of armoured shorelines. Many cities are centred on estuaries, and urban expansion is often associated with the fragmentation of mangrove forests. Our findings emphasize that these transformations of urban estuarine landscapes are likely to propagate to broader ecological impacts detectable in multiple habitats beyond mangrove forests. © 2019 International Council for the Exploration of the Sea 2019.

Funding

Category 2 - Other Public Sector Grants Category

History

Volume

76

Issue

4

Start Page

1052

End Page

1061

Number of Pages

10

eISSN

1095-9289

ISSN

1054-3139

Publisher

Oxford University Press, UK

Peer Reviewed

  • Yes

Open Access

  • No

Acceptance Date

2019-01-08

External Author Affiliations

USC, Griffith, JCU

Author Research Institute

  • Coastal Marine Ecosystems Research Centre (CMERC)

Era Eligible

  • Yes

Journal

ICES Journal of Marine Science