Title of article :
Fish population size and movement patterns in a small intermittently open South African estuary
Author/Authors :
J.R. Lukey، نويسنده , , A.J. Booth، نويسنده , , P.W Froneman، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2006
Abstract :
The population size and movement patterns of small fish (>50 mm SL) in a small intermittently open estuary (Grant’s Valley estuary:
33 40012.100S, 26 42012.600E) situated on the south-east Cape coast of South Africa were examined during the closed phase over the period
May and August 2004. The estuary was subdivided into four discrete areas and the fish within each area sampled using a 30 m seine net
(15 mm mesh). Fish captured were marked by fin clipping according to the area of capture. Fish population size was estimated by using three
methods: the Schnabel estimator, the Hilborn estimator, and a derived estimator. A total of 12 species was captured and marked during the study.
The total number of fish in the estuary was estimated at ca. 12 000 individuals (11 219e13 311). Marine-breeding species (Rhabdosargus holubi,
Monodactylus falciformis, and two mullet species) numerically dominated the ichthyofauna, possibly as a result of their effective use of overtopping
events, when seawater washes over the sandbar, to enter the estuary during the closed mouth phase. The two mullet species, Myxus
capensis and Liza richardsonii, and the Cape stumpnose, R. holubi moved extensively throughout the estuary, while the remaining species
exhibited restricted movement patterns possibly due to the preference for refuge and foraging areas associated with reed beds. The observed
movement patterns of individual fish species appeared to be associated with both foraging behaviour and habitat selection.
Keywords :
fish movement modelling , Population size estimates , Mark-recapture , estuarine fish , intermittently open estuary , Habitat selection , South Africa
Journal title :
Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science
Journal title :
Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science