Where to fish in the forest? Tree characteristics and contiguous seagrass features predict mangrove forest quality for fishes and crustaceans

Author:

Wanjiru Caroline1,Nagelkerken Ivan2ORCID,Rueckert Sonja34,Harcourt William5ORCID,Huxham Mark3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Pure and Applied Sciences Kenyatta University Mombasa Kenya

2. Southern Seas Ecology Laboratories, School of Biological Sciences and The Environment Institute The University of Adelaide Adelaide South Australia Australia

3. School of Applied Sciences and Centre for Conservation and Restoration Science Edinburgh Napier University Edinburgh UK

4. Faculty of Biology University of Duisburg‐Essen Essen Germany

5. School of Geosciences University of Aberdeen Aberdeen UK

Abstract

Abstract Mangroves often support rich fish and crustacean communities, although faunal abundance and diversity show strong spatiotemporal variability. Consistent patterns in mangrove animal communities might be dictated by forest characteristics, by seascape context or by some combination of these factors. Predicting drivers of spatial heterogeneity in mangrove faunal communities can better support the zoning of forests for management purposes, for example by identifying sites important for fisheries nursery provision. We sampled 14 sites within a large (4000 ha) mangrove forest in Kenya, quarterly over a period of 2 years. There were clear and consistent differences in the quality of sites for fish and crustacean abundance and diversity. Forest characteristics (as summarised by the complexity index, CI) and seascape metrics (the presence, area and configuration of contiguous seagrass) were strong predictors of site differences. However, they showed opposite influences on dominant members of the fish and crustacean faunas, with CI correlated negatively with fishes and positively with crustaceans, and seagrass area correlated positively with fishes and negatively with crustaceans. Synthesis and applications. Sites within the same mangrove forest exhibit consistent differences in fish and crustacean abundance. However, the fish and crustacean communities (and particularly dominant species within them) act differently in response to forest and seascape characteristics. Old growth, mature forest, set in a seascape of seagrass patches with bare sediment, was associated with highest crustacean abundance. In contrast, denser smaller trees and seascapes with larger, continuous areas of seagrass correlated better with fish abundance. Zoning for management, as mandated in new Kenyan policy, will need to consider these differences in seascape use between fish and crustaceans.

Funder

Earthwatch Institute

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Ecology

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