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Seagrasses and Sea Meadows: 2003 Publications
Vanderklift, M.A.
and Jacoby, C.A. Patterns in fish assemblages 25 years after
major seagrass loss. Marine Ecology Progress Series 247:
225-235, 2003.
© Inter-Research
Notes:
Inferences about the effects of habitat loss may be derived from comparisons
of different places when pre-impact data are unavailable. We compared the fish
faunas of sandy substrata off beaches with and without seagrass in Cockburn Sound
(Western Australia), a bay where >3000 ha of seagrass was lost from the 1950s
to the 1970s, and for which there are no pre-impact data. Numbers of species
and individuals varied considerably in space and time, and this variation obscured
patterns that might have been associated with the presence or absence of seagrass.
Multivariate tests indicated some significant differences in species composition
between beaches with and without seagrass; however, patterns among species were
complex. Catches were strongly influenced by depth and the quantity of drifting
vegetation. In general, fewer species were captured at shallower beaches. Hauls
with a lot of drift captured more species, more individuals and higher biomasses
of fishes that eat invertebrates and are associated with plants. When widespread
seagrass loss occurs, resultant decreases in the supply of drift are likely to
negatively affect densities of some fauna. We can make no firm conclusions about
the effects of seagrass loss in Cockburn Sound, but suggest that declines in
the production of drift have caused changes in fish assemblages.
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