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Article     |     Next >>   Contents Vol 60(1)

Assemblages of fish along a mangrove–mudflat gradient in temperate Australia

Nicholas Leslie Payne A B, Bronwyn May Gillanders A

A Southern Seas Ecology Laboratories, Darling Building DX 650 418, School of Earth and Environmental Sciences, University of Adelaide, Adelaide, SA 5005, Australia.
B Corresponding author. Email: nicholas.payne@adelaide.edu.au
 
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Abstract

Mangroves are considered to support rich assemblages of fish and invertebrates. Fishes inhabiting mangrove habitats and at various distances from mangroves across mudflats were sampled to: (1) compare fish assemblages between habitats; and (2) determine the influence of mangrove proximity on fish abundance and diversity in three southern Australian estuaries between November 2005 and January 2006. Based on their distribution, fish species were classified as mangrove residents, mudflat residents, generalists or rare species. The assemblage structure of fish in mangroves differed from assemblages 500 m away; however, neither total abundance nor species richness differed significantly between mangroves and mudflats. Mangrove residents and Aldrichetta forsteri (yellow-eyed mullet) displayed strong associations with mangrove habitats, whereas mudflat residents were associated with mudflat habitats. No other fish groups or individual species occurred in higher abundances in either habitat. Total fish abundance, mangrove residents and A. forsteri were positively correlated with pneumatophore density, indicating that the structural complexity of the mangroves might influence the distributions of certain fish species. The current study demonstrated that mangrove habitats in temperate Australia support no greater abundance or diversity of fish than adjacent mudflat habitats and that mangrove proximity does not influence fish distribution at a habitat scale.

Keywords: estuarine, nurseries, structural complexity.


   
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