Trophic Response of Fishes to Habitat Variability in Coastal Seagrass Systems
1984
Livingston, Robert J.
Shallow coastal areas of the northeast Gulf of Mexico are physically unstable in terms of short—term, seasonal, and year—to—year changes in temperature, salinity, nutrient concentration, and other water quality features. A 9—yr comparison was made of two estuaries, one polluted and one in the natural state, to determine the response of fish assemblages to habitat alteration in space and time. During the study period, extreme natural habitat changes due to storm water runoff and low winter temperatures were superimposed over water quality changes (increased color, turbidity, nutrients; reduced dissolved oxygen) associated with release of pulp mill effluents. Various grassbed fishes followed regular seasonal, age—specific feeding patterns, which did not change substantially in terms of qualitative food composition in the unpolluted estuary over a 7—yr period of observation. Such feeding behavior helped to explain temporally conservative cycles of relative abundance despite extreme (natural) habitat change. Anthropogenous habitat alterations, though seemingly slight, were associated with reductions in benthic macrophyte distribution, enhanced phytoplankton productivity, and changes in the relative dominance and numerical abundance of associated fish assemblages. Grassbed species were replaced by plankton—feeding fishes, and disruption of feeding habits of various species was apparent in the affected area relative to the unpolluted estuary. Those fishes dependent on specific benthic food organisms altered their feeding habits during the years of pollution in the affected estuary. Subsequent water quality improvement over time was associated with shifts in the age—specific dietary patterns of various species toward those observed in the unaffected estuary, although such recovery varied from species to species according to habitat utilization and trophic needs. From these results, it is clear that a relatively complex coastal seagrass system exposed to periodic, extreme natural disturbance is relatively resilient to such changes in terms of relative dominance and food web structure. However, apparently slight water quality changes due to pollution, which are outside the evolutionary experience of the biotic components, can cause serious disruptions of the basic habitat structure, energy flow, and community composition of the grassbed assemblages at various levels of biological organization.
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