Fish and Fisheries in Estuaries. Группа авторов

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FEO = freshwater estuarine‐opportunist, FS = freshwater straggler. Estuaries: P = Peel‐Harvey, Sw = Swan‐Canning, Bw = Blackwood, L = Leschenault, O = Oyster, M = Moore, V = Vasse‐Wonnerup, Br = Broke, I = Irwin, W = Wilson, We = Wellstead, St = Stokes, H = Hamersley, C = Culham. Estuary type: PO = permanently open, IO = intermittently open, SO = seasonally open, NC = normally closed.

      The concept of guilds was first developed for fishes inhabiting estuaries in the early classical works by McHugh (1967), Cronin & Mansueti (1971), Perkins (1974), Haedrich (1983) and Wallace et al. (1984), all of whom separated the components of the estuarine nekton into ecological groupings. The concept was also used by de Sylva (1975) and Whitfield (1980b) who defined groupings of estuarine fishes based on their feeding preferences and food web structure. This type of analysis was then extended to include descriptions of the migration, reproduction and habitat preferences of species (e.g. Potter et al. 1990, Whitfield 1990, Elliott & Dewailly 1995).

Schematic illustration of life cycle guilds of estuary-associated fishes.

      Within each of the above major categories, subcategories have been defined and, where possible, examples given that illustrate the use of that mode by fishes from estuaries in different biogeographical regions (Elliott et al. 2007, Potter et al. 2015a). In this way, the approach can be used to show similarities or differences in the global estuarine fish community structure, based primarily on the functional guilds encountered.

       2.4.1 Estuarine Use Functional Group (EUFG)

      Estuaries have well‐defined roles as areas for fish feeding and refuge and as migration routes, fundamental properties now shown to occur worldwide, e.g. for North America (Nordlie 2003), the tropical Indo‐Pacific (Blaber 2000), Europe (Elliott & Hemingway 2002), tropical Africa (Albaret et al. 2004), southern Australia (Potter & Hyndes 1999) and subtropical and temperate southern Africa (Whitfield 1999). The seasonal and spatial occurrence of species and their biological attributes are sometimes well known (e.g. Claridge et al. 1986) such that taxa can be assigned to guilds, which denote the primary estuarine use made by different species (Table 2.2). These terms have been widely used and consolidated by Elliott et al. (2007) and Potter et al. (2015a) to include more recent information and account for subtle differences worldwide. The revisions indicate the migration patterns, physiological adaptations required to occupy estuaries, and the multifaceted use of these areas by fish species, including stragglers from adjacent freshwater and marine environments.

      The selected categories outlined in Table 2.2 and Figure 2.10 cover all the dominant groups of fishes found in estuaries, as well as describing the links between the estuary and areas downstream (along the coast and in the open sea) and upstream (into freshwaters) of the estuarine environment. As expected, much of the estuarine fish community originates from marine areas and this is reflected in the guild approach. This approach has previously taken several different forms, for example the bioecological categories and ‘affinities’ defined by Albaret (1999) for tropical African estuaries and lagoons distributed according to two gradients. These gradients, of species with a marine affinity and species with a freshwater affinity, indicate the sources of the species inhabiting the estuary and thus the influence of natural and anthropogenic influences external to the estuary, e.g. impoundment of catchment rivers affecting those estuarine species with a freshwater affinity (Chícharo & Chícharo 2006).

Category and guild Definition Examples
Marine category Species that spawn at sea
Marine straggler Typically enter estuaries sporadically and in low numbers and are most common in the lower reaches where salinities typically do not decline far below ~35. Belong to populations in marine waters and are often stenohaline Scomberomorus maculatus (Scombridae) Lithognathus mormyrus (Sparidae) Lutjanus colorado (Lutjanidae)
Marine estuarine‐opportunist Regularly enter estuaries in substantial numbers, particularly as juveniles,

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