期刊
ESTUARIES AND COASTS
卷 44, 期 6, 页码 1604-1618出版社
SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s12237-021-00896-4
关键词
Nekton; Foraging; Predation; Tides; Bathymetry
资金
- California Department of Fish and Wildlife Ecosystem Restoration Program [E1183013]
- California Department of Water Resources [4600011551]
- California Department of Fish and Wildlife Proposition 1 [P1696010]
- S. D. Bechtel Jr. Foundation
- Delta Science Fellowship
Research in the San Francisco Estuary, CA, USA, has shown that factors such as channel depth, microhabitat, and tides influence fish abundance, while different feeding guilds overlap in space and time. During tidal flooding, fish are predicted to have high gut fullness in subtidal channels, after which they intensively feed throughout the marsh ecosystem.
Mechanisms driving the consumption and transport of tidal marsh nutrients and energy by fishes are of key interest in the San Francisco Estuary, CA, USA. By combining multiple data sources (gill-net catches, gut contents, channel morphology, tides), we modeled spatial and temporal patterns of fish abundance and gut fullness across a tidal marsh elevation gradient. Channel depth, microhabitat, and tide were important predictors of fish abundance and gut fullness. Species, feeding guild, and season were also important to fish abundance but not to gut fullness, suggesting that abundance was more related to physical constraints of shallow water than to prey availability. Multiple feeding guilds overlapped in space and time at interaction hotspots in subtidal channel habitat near the marsh entrance. In contrast, fish use of shallow intertidal marsh channels was more variable and indicated tradeoffs between foraging and predation. Gut content analysis revealed moderate-to-high gut fullness for all feeding guilds and models predicted high gut fullness in subtidal reaches during tidal flooding, after which fish fed intensively throughout the marsh. While mysids, amphipods, and detritus were common prey among feeding guilds, variation in prey consumption was apparent. Overall, complex tidal marsh hydrogeomorphology driving land-water exchange and residence time may diversify and enhance benthic and pelagic food web pathways to fishes and invertebrates. Furthermore, these findings substantiate the notion that dynamic tidal marshes in this system can support robust secondary production, foraging by multiple feeding guilds, and trophic transfer by fishes to the estuarine mosaic.
作者
我是这篇论文的作者
点击您的名字以认领此论文并将其添加到您的个人资料中。
推荐
暂无数据