Mangroves: 2001 Publications
Author: Nagelkerken,
I., Kleijnen, S., Klop, T., vandenBrand, R.A.C.J., de la Moriniere, E.C., and
vanderVelde, G.
Title:
Dependence of Caribbean reef fishes on mangroves and seagrass beds as nursery
habitats: a comparison of fish faunas between bays with and without mangroves/seagrass
beds.
Publication: Marine
Ecology Progress Series 214: 225-235, 2001.
© Inter-Research
Notes:
Mangroves and seagrass beds are considered
important nursery habitats for coral reef fish species in the Caribbean, but
it is not known to what degree the fish depend on these habitats. The fish
fauna of 11 different inland bays of the Caribbean island of Curacao were
compared; the bays contain 4 different habitat types: seagrass beds in bays
containing mangroves, seagrass beds in bays lacking mangroves, mud flats in
bays containing mangroves and seagrass beds, and mud flats in bays completely
lacking mangroves and seagrass beds. Principal component analysis showed a
high similarity of fish fauna among bays belonging to each of the 4 habitat
types, despite some differences in habitat variables and human influence between
bays. Juveniles of nursery species < fish species using mangroves and seagrass
beds as juvenile nurseries before taking up residence on reefs < showed highest
abundance and species richness on the seagrass beds, and on the mud flats
near mangroves and seagrass beds, but were almost absent from bays containing
only mud flats. The high abundance and species richness on the mud flats near
nursery habitats can be explained by fishes migrating from the adjacent mangroves/seagrass
beds to the mud flats. Seagrass beds near to mangroves showed a higher richness
of nursery species than did seagrass beds alone, suggesting an interaction
with the mangroves resulting in an enhancement of species richness. Comparison
of fish densities from the 4 different habitat types indicates that for the
nursery species the degree of dependence on a combination of mangroves and
seagrass beds as nurseries for juvenile fish is high for Ocyurus chrysurus
and Scarus iserti, the dependence on seagrass beds is high for Haemulon
parrai, H. sciurus, Lutjanus apodus,
L. griseus, Sparisoma
chrysopterum and Sphyraena barracuda, and the dependence on mud flats near mangroves/seagrass
beds is high for L. analis. The dependence on mangroves and/or seagrass beds is
low for Chaetodon capistratus,
Gerres cinereus, H.
flavolineatum and L. mahogoni, which can also use alternative nursery habitats.
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