4.5 Article

The Influence of Freshwater on Nekton Community Structure in Hydrologically Distinct Basins in Northeastern Florida Bay, FL, USA

Journal

ESTUARIES AND COASTS
Volume 36, Issue 5, Pages 918-939

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s12237-013-9614-3

Keywords

Nekton community structure; Freshwater inflow; Florida Bay; Salinity variability; Restoration

Funding

  1. State of Florida
  2. US Department of the Interior, National Park Service [EVER-00272]
  3. US Fish and Wildlife Service, Federal Aid for Sportfish [F-43]

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Natural patterns of freshwater delivery to the Florida Bay estuary have been disrupted by flood-control and water-supply projects. Restoration efforts are likely to alter salinity regimes and patterns of nekton distribution and abundance. Spatial and seasonal community structure differences were analyzed for small-bodied and large-bodied nekton collected by fisheries-independent monitoring from 2006 through 2009 in the northeastern basins of Florida Bay. The small-bodied nekton community was dominated by resident fish that may be indicators of ecosystem health because they spend their lives within the bay and are not directly influenced by human harvest; the large-bodied nekton community was dominated by transient and, in some cases, economically important species. Differences in community structure revealed a gradient in similarity that was associated with freshwater influence, as determined by salinity variability over the study period. These observed changes associated with salinity regimes within and between basins underscore the importance of monitoring communities before and after alterations in freshwater inflow.

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