Resampling 25 years later reveals fewer species but higher abundance of juvenile fishes in a Caribbean mangrove bay

Author:

Kendall Matthew S1,Williams Bethany L2,Ruffo Ashley3,Winship Arliss J2,Siceloff Laughlin2,Adams Aaron4,Tobias William5

Affiliation:

1. NOAA/NOS/NCCOS/MSE Biogeography Branch, 1305 East West Highway, Silver Spring, Maryland 20910;, Email: matt.kendall@noaa.gov

2. CSS Inc., 10301 Democracy Lane, Fairfax, Virginia 22030; NOAA/NOS/NCCOS/MSE Biogeography Branch, 1305 East West Highway, Silver Spring, Maryland 20910

3. NOAA/NMFS/SE Region Habitat Conservation Division, 3013 Estate Golden Rock, Christiansted, US Virgin Islands 00820

4. Bonefish and Tarpon Trust, 2937 SW 27 thAvenue, Suite 203, Miami, Florida 33133; Florida Atlantic University Harbor Branch Oceanographic Institute, 5600 US-1, Fort Pierce, Florida 34946

5. PO Box 3025, Kingshill, Virgin Islands 00851

Abstract

The prop roots of mangroves play an important role as habitat for juvenile fishes. Revisit studies (>10 yrs apart) provide rare and valuable insights into the structure and stability of these systems in the face of escalating pressure from coastal development, climate change, and fisheries. We compared assemblages of juvenile fishes in the mangroves of a Caribbean estuary from 1991 to 1993 and 2018 to 2019 using trap collections to quantify changes and identify their potential drivers. Although the environmental and physical properties of the mangrove landscape were similar between the two periods, there were significant changes in many aspects of the fish assemblage. Compared to 25 yrs earlier, overall fish abundance (catch per unit effort, CPUE) was 3 to 7 times higher but overall biodiversity was 30% lower at the species level and 50% lower at the genus level. Taxa with dramatic changes in CPUE were mojarras (Gerreidae, 84% lower CPUE in 2018–2019), snappers (17 times higher CPUE), puffers (Tetraodontidae, 14 times higher CPUE), and moray eels (>200 times higher CPUE). Traps in 2019 also captured the first documented invasive Indo-Pacific swimming crab (Charybdis helerii) in the US Virgin Islands. The observed changes in the fish assemblage may be due to natural variations in recruitment, environmental influences, and/or hurricane disturbance, but for some species likely relate to declines in adult reef fish populations in the region.

Publisher

Bulletin of Marine Science

Subject

Aquatic Science,Oceanography

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