12 research outputs found

    Do nursery habitats provide shelter from flow for juvenile fish?

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    <div><p>Juvenile fish nurseries are an essential life stage requirement for the maintenance of many fish populations. With many inshore habitats globally in decline, optimising habitat management by increasing our understanding of the relationship between juvenile fish and nursery habitats may be a prudent approach. Previous research on post–settlement snapper (<i>Chrysophrys auratus</i>) has suggested that structure may provide a water flow refuge, allowing snapper to access high water flow sites that will also have a high flux of their pelagic prey. We investigated this hypothesis by describing how Artificial Seagrass Units (ASUs) modified water flow while also using a multi–camera set up to quantify snapper position in relation to this water flow environment. Horizontal water flow was reduced on the down–current side of ASUs, but only at the height of the seagrass canopy. While the highest abundance of snapper did occur down–current of the ASUs, many snapper also occupied other locations or were too high in the water column to receive any refuge from water flow. The proportion of snapper within the water column was potentially driven by strategy to access zooplankton prey, being higher on the up–current side of ASUs and on flood tides. It is possible that post–settlement snapper alternate position to provide opportunities for both feeding and flow refuging. An alternative explanation relates to an observed interaction between post–settlement snapper and a predator, which demonstrated that snapper can utilise habitat structure when threatened. The nature of this relationship, and its overall importance in determining the value of nursery habitats to post–settlement snapper remains an elusive next step.</p></div

    Aerial view layout of video cameras positions used to film post–settlement snapper associated with an ASU.

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    <p>Camera position naming indicated for just one water flow direction. Camera naming reverses on the opposing tidal direction. No camera deployments encompassed a change in tidal direction.</p

    Proportion of 0+ snapper within the water column by water velocity.

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    <p>Proportion data are presented as open circles and were categorised for maximum counts from one minute video observations. The left column of plots are for flood tide camera deployments, the right column for ebb tide camera deployments. Each row of plots represents the proportion of snapper in the water column as observed from a different camera position. Data presented have been subsampled to reduce temporal autocorrelation. The red line for each panel represents a 2<sup>nd</sup> order polynomial quantile regression spline fitted through the 50<sup>th</sup> percentile of the data.</p

    [Monnaies romaines, françaises et étrangères...]

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    [Vente. Numismatique. 1861-01-24 - 1861-01-26. Paris][Collection. Numismatique. Grépinet. 1861]Contient une table des matièresAvec mode text

    Vertical distributions of mean water velocity around an ASU.

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    <p> is longitudinal velocity, is transverse velocity, and is vertical velocity, all measured at locations A, B and C. Profile number refers to the time period when each set of water velocity measurements were collected (AMP1 (profiles 1–7) and AMP2 (profiles 8–14), but see <a href="http://www.plosone.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal.pone.0186889#pone.0186889.g008" target="_blank">Fig 8</a> for a graphical representation). Measurements were made with ADVs during a two day deployment in June 2016.</p

    Do nursery habitats provide shelter from flow for juvenile fish? - Fig 10

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    <p><b>Vertical distributions of turbulence energy dissipation (ε) measured at locations A, B and C.</b> Profile number refers to the time period when each set of turbulence measurements were collected (AMP1 (profiles 1–7) and AMP2 (profiles 8–14), but see <a href="http://www.plosone.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal.pone.0186889#pone.0186889.g008" target="_blank">Fig 8</a> for a graphical representation). Measurements were made with ADVs during a two day deployment in June 2016.</p

    ADCP measurements of the background conditions experienced during the ADV deployments.

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    <p>Panels: (A) water depth, (B) current speed, (C) current direction (in oceanographic convention “flowing to”) and (D) significant wave height (<i>H</i><sub><i>s</i></sub>). The timing of when the water flow profiles were collected is indicated on panel (A).</p

    Map of Whangarei Harbour.

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    <p>Intertidal sand banks indicated by light grey shading and the location of the Artificial Seagrass Unit array denoted by a black star. North Island, New Zealand and Whangarei Harbour inset.</p

    Abundance of 0+ snapper by water velocity.

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    <p>Snapper abundance is the maximum count observed within a one minute video sample. The left column of plots is for flood tide camera deployments, the right column for ebb tide camera deployments. Each row of plots represents snapper abundance as observed from a different camera position. Data presented have been subsampled to reduce temporal autocorrelation. The red line for each panel represents a 2<sup>nd</sup> order polynomial quantile regression spline fitted through the 50<sup>th</sup> percentile of the data.</p

    Abundance of invertebrates collected from all sites via four different sampling methods.

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    <p>Abundances are standardised by the most abundant taxa within a sampling method, but all plots are presented in order of abundance for diet invertebrates. Taxonomic nomenclature presented is not always at same level.</p
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