29 research outputs found
Seasonal distribution of Gobiids in waters adjacent to estuarine marsh-edge habitats: sssessing the effects of habitat alteration
A comparison of age estimates from sagittal otoliths and the first dorsal spine for cobia (Rachycentron canadum) from the northcentral Gulf of Mexico; Comparacion de la edad estimada con otolitos sagitales y la primera espina dorsal en cobia (Rachycentron canadum) en el norte del Golfo de Mejico
Red snapper (Lutjanus campechanus) associated with a small artificial structure in the Mississippi Sound, a northern Gulf of Mexico estuary; Asociacion del pargo rojo (Lutjanus campechanus) con una pequena estructura artificial en Mississippi Sound, un estuario al norte del Golfo de Mexico
Preliminary assessment of the association of larval fishes with pelagic Sargassum habitat and convergence zones in the north central Gulf of Mexico
A comparison of age estimates from sagittal otoliths and the first dorsal spine for cobia (Rachycentron canadum) from the northern Gulf of Mexico [abstract]; Comparacion de la edad estimada con otolitos sagitales y la primera espina dorsal en cobia (Rachycentron canadum) en el norte del Golfo de Mejico [resumen]
Management of Response Efforts to the Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill: Perspectives from a Northern Gulf of Mexico Marine and Coastal Research Laboratory.
Aspects of the reproduction of large pelagic fishes in the northern Gulf of Mexico [abstract]; Aspectos de la reproduccion de peces pelagicos grandes en el norte del Golfo de Mejico [resumen]
Effects of coastal urbanization on salt-marsh faunal assemblages in the northern Gulf of Mexico
Author Posting. © American Fisheries Society, 2014. This article is posted here by permission of American Fisheries Society for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Marine and Coastal Fisheries: Dynamics, Management, and Ecosystem Science 6 (2014): 89-107, doi:10.1080/19425120.2014.893467.Coastal landscapes in the northern Gulf of Mexico, specifically the Mississippi coast, have undergone rapid urbanization that may impact the suitability of salt-marsh ecosystems for maintaining and regulating estuarine faunal communities. We used a landscape ecology approach to quantify the composition and configuration of salt-marsh habitats and developed surfaces at multiple spatial scales surrounding three small, first-order salt-marsh tidal creeks arrayed along a gradient of urbanization in two river-dominated estuaries. From May 3 to June 4, 2010, nekton and macroinfauna were collected weekly at all six sites. Due to the greater abundance of grass shrimp Palaemonetes spp., brown shrimp Farfantepenaeus aztecus, blue crab Callinectes sapidus, Gulf Menhaden Brevoortia patronus, and Spot Leiostomus xanthurus, tidal creeks in intact natural (IN) salt-marsh landscapes supported a nekton assemblage that was significantly different from those in partially urbanized (PU) or completely urbanized (CU) salt-marsh landscapes. However, PU landscapes still supported an abundant nekton assemblage. In addition, the results illustrated a linkage between life history traits and landscape characteristics. Resident and transient nekton species that have specific habitat requirements are more likely to be impacted in urbanized landscapes than more mobile species that are able to exploit multiple habitats. Patterns were less clear for macroinfaunal assemblages, although they were comparatively less abundant in CU salt-marsh landscapes than in either IN or PU landscapes. The low abundance or absence of several macroinfaunal taxa in CU landscapes may be viewed as an additional indicator of poor habitat quality for nekton. The observed patterns also suggested that benthic sediments in the CU salt-marsh landscapes were altered in comparison with IN or PU landscapes. The amount of developed shoreline and various metrics related to salt marsh fragmentation were important drivers of observed patterns in nekton and macroinfaunal assemblages
