3.8 Article

Seasonal changes in the Nekton community of the Suwannee River estuary and the potential impacts of freshwater withdrawal

Journal

ESTUARIES
Volume 25, Issue 6B, Pages 1372-1381

Publisher

ESTUARINE RESEARCH FEDERATION
DOI: 10.1007/BF02692231

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In Florida, issues related to alterations of estuarine salinity caused by freshwater withdrawal have recently gained increasing attention. We examined nekton community structure in the Suwannee River estuary (1997-2000) and investigated the relationship between environmental factors and the abundance of fisheries resources. We compared nekton community structure and environmental factors seasonally and annually using multidimensional scaling (MDS) ordination and cluster analysis and observed a strong seasonal pattern. This pattern was consistent among years and closely paralleled those for temperature and river discharge. Representative species for cold seasons included Leiostomus xanthurus and Lagodon rhomboides, and those for warm seasons included Membras martinica and Anchoa hepsetus. Species that contributed most to the dissimilarity in community structures between wet and dry seasons were abundant and generally preferred lower salinity (e.g., L. xanthurus, Eucinostomus spp., and Menidia spp.). A period of low freshwater inflow during the latter portion of our study coincided with both decreases and increases in the abundances of some dominant and some economically important species. We have established a baseline which will assist in measuring the effects of long-term changes in freshwater input on the nekton communities of the Suwannee River estuary, but our ability to predict these effects is still limited.

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