Journal
ESTUARIES AND COASTS
Volume 37, Issue 1, Pages 206-228Publisher
SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s12237-013-9652-x
Keywords
Lutjanus griseus; Habitat suitability; Estuary; Recruitment; Seagrass; Mangroves
Funding
- State of Florida
- Department of the Interior
- US Fish and Wildlife Service
- Federal Aid for Sportfish Restoration [F-43]
- Department of Commerce, National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration, National Marine Fisheries Service, MARFIN [NA09NMF4330152]
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Reef fishes, such as gray snapper, support important recreational and commercial fisheries and use a variety of habitats throughout ontogeny. Gray snapper juveniles may be found in estuarine nursery areas, such as seagrass beds, or mangrove shorelines, while adults are most often found in deep channels and farther offshore, associated with hard-bottom habitats. Juvenile and subadult gray snapper were collected from 1996 through 2009 during long-term fishery-independent monitoring of several estuarine systems along the Gulf and Atlantic coasts of Florida. Indices of abundance and habitat suitability were constructed for gray snapper to determine size-specific relationships between abundance, habitat, and environmental conditions. Juvenile and subadult gray snapper were collected year-round only in the southernmost estuaries but were most common from July through December in all estuaries sampled. In addition to timing of estuarine occupancy, abundance varied with latitude; gray snapper were more frequently collected in warmer, southern estuaries. In general, gray snapper were most abundant in euhaline areas with a high percentage of submerged aquatic vegetation (SAV) and, in most cases, where overhanging shoreline vegetation was also present. Annual abundance varied over the sampling period, with some juvenile peaks in abundance translating to subadult peaks in subsequent years. Although strong correspondence between juvenile and subadult populations was not observed in all systems, long-term, broad-scale habitat selection patterns as described in this study are critical to more effectively assess populations of estuarine-dependent species.
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