Affiliation:
1. Marine Science Institute, University of California, Santa Barbara, California;, Email: love@lifesci.ucsb.edu
2. Marine Science Institute, University of California, Santa Barbara, California
3. Southwest Fisheries Science Center, National Marine Fisheries Service, NOAA, 110 McAllister Way, Santa Cruz, California
Abstract
Between September and November in 1995 and 1998–2011, we conducted surveys of demersal fishes and their associated benthic habitats using direct observations from human-occupied vehicles over the Footprint, an isolated submerged ridge located seawards of the Santa Cruz Island-
Anacapa Island Passage, Southern California, extending over bottom depths of about 94–500 m. The observed fish fauna, consisting of 127,351 individuals of at least 79 species, was dominated by rockfishes (genus Sebastes; 94.5% of individuals, 47% of species). The Footprint is
home to a complex of benthic habitats that are occupied by a number of fish assemblages. These were defined by bottom depth, habitat type, and the environmental tolerances and preferences of each species. While the habitat-limited benthic species that occupy the shallower parts of the Footprint
are isolated from the Santa Cruz Island and Anacapa Island shelves, the fishes living on the Footprint are not reproductively isolated. Rather, through a web of connections, the fishes of the Footprint are likely well integrated into the Southern California Bight. This connectivity, flowing
towards and away from the Footprint, means that events hundreds or thousands of kilometers away may have profound effects on the fish assemblages of this feature. For example, economically important species were relatively uncommon, possibly the result of past overfishing locally and a lack
of immigration from other regions.
Publisher
Bulletin of Marine Science
Subject
Aquatic Science,Oceanography
Cited by
2 articles.
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