Seasonal, annual and regional variations in ichthyofaunal composition in the inner Severn Estuary and inner Bristol Channel

Monthly samples of fish from the intake screens of power stations at Oldbury and Berkeley in the inner Severn Estuary and Hinkley Point in the inner Bristol Channel, were used to analyse the community structures of the ichthyofauna in these regions. Marine species that use the estuary as a nursery a...

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Main Authors: Potter, I.C., Claridge, P.N., Hyndes, G.A., Clarke, K.R.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Cambridge University Press 1997
Subjects:
Online Access:https://researchrepository.murdoch.edu.au/id/eprint/18594/
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spelling ftmurdochuniv:oai:researchrepository.murdoch.edu.au:18594 2023-05-15T16:08:40+02:00 Seasonal, annual and regional variations in ichthyofaunal composition in the inner Severn Estuary and inner Bristol Channel Potter, I.C. Claridge, P.N. Hyndes, G.A. Clarke, K.R. 1997 https://researchrepository.murdoch.edu.au/id/eprint/18594/ eng eng Cambridge University Press https://researchrepository.murdoch.edu.au/id/eprint/18594/ full_text_status:public © Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom 1997 Potter, I.C. <https://researchrepository.murdoch.edu.au/view/author/Potter, Ian.html>, Claridge, P.N., Hyndes, G.A. <https://researchrepository.murdoch.edu.au/view/author/Hyndes, Glenn.html> and Clarke, K.R. <https://researchrepository.murdoch.edu.au/view/author/Clarke, Robert.html> (1997) Seasonal, annual and regional variations in ichthyofaunal composition in the inner Severn Estuary and inner Bristol Channel. Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom, 77 (02). pp. 507-525. Journal Article 1997 ftmurdochuniv 2020-01-05T18:50:19Z Monthly samples of fish from the intake screens of power stations at Oldbury and Berkeley in the inner Severn Estuary and Hinkley Point in the inner Bristol Channel, were used to analyse the community structures of the ichthyofauna in these regions. Marine species that use the estuary as a nursery area (marine estuarine-opportunists) were very abundant in the shallow inshore waters at Oldbury. Diadromous species were more abundant in the offshore and deeper waters at Berkeley than at Oldbury. Only one of the two species that complete their life cycles in the estuary was even moderately abundant in the inner estuary and the 15 freshwater species were relatively rare. Bass and particularly the sand goby complex were more numerous in the protected, inshore waters than the more offshore waters of the estuary. With the yellow and silver stages of the European eel, the reverse situation pertained. Seasonal changes in faunal composition were more pronounced in the inshore shallow than in more offshore deeper waters of the estuary. This largely reflected the sequential immigration of large numbers of the juveniles of marine estuarine-opportunist species into the former area for relatively short periods. Although the ichthyofaunal composition in the shallows at Oldbury underwent the same pattern of cyclical variation in each of five consecutive years, the degree of intra-annual variability differed, reflecting interannual differences in the recruitment strengths of the 0+ age classes of the different marine estuarine-opportunists. These cyclical changes were not correlated strongly with either salinity or water temperature. The faunal composition of the protected inshore, more marine waters of the inner Bristol Channel differed from those in both inshore and offshore regions of the inner estuary. The species which typified the fauna of the Channel were bib, poor cod, five-bearded rockling, sole and conger eel. Although the first four of these species were relatively more abundant in these waters than in the estuary, their juveniles often made extensive use of the shallows at Oldbury. This study emphasizes that, for some marine species, the protected inshore, and more marine, waters in the Bristol Channel can act as alternative nursery areas to those provided by the inshore shallows of the Severn Estuary. Article in Journal/Newspaper European eel Murdoch University: Murdoch Research Repository
institution Open Polar
collection Murdoch University: Murdoch Research Repository
op_collection_id ftmurdochuniv
language English
description Monthly samples of fish from the intake screens of power stations at Oldbury and Berkeley in the inner Severn Estuary and Hinkley Point in the inner Bristol Channel, were used to analyse the community structures of the ichthyofauna in these regions. Marine species that use the estuary as a nursery area (marine estuarine-opportunists) were very abundant in the shallow inshore waters at Oldbury. Diadromous species were more abundant in the offshore and deeper waters at Berkeley than at Oldbury. Only one of the two species that complete their life cycles in the estuary was even moderately abundant in the inner estuary and the 15 freshwater species were relatively rare. Bass and particularly the sand goby complex were more numerous in the protected, inshore waters than the more offshore waters of the estuary. With the yellow and silver stages of the European eel, the reverse situation pertained. Seasonal changes in faunal composition were more pronounced in the inshore shallow than in more offshore deeper waters of the estuary. This largely reflected the sequential immigration of large numbers of the juveniles of marine estuarine-opportunist species into the former area for relatively short periods. Although the ichthyofaunal composition in the shallows at Oldbury underwent the same pattern of cyclical variation in each of five consecutive years, the degree of intra-annual variability differed, reflecting interannual differences in the recruitment strengths of the 0+ age classes of the different marine estuarine-opportunists. These cyclical changes were not correlated strongly with either salinity or water temperature. The faunal composition of the protected inshore, more marine waters of the inner Bristol Channel differed from those in both inshore and offshore regions of the inner estuary. The species which typified the fauna of the Channel were bib, poor cod, five-bearded rockling, sole and conger eel. Although the first four of these species were relatively more abundant in these waters than in the estuary, their juveniles often made extensive use of the shallows at Oldbury. This study emphasizes that, for some marine species, the protected inshore, and more marine, waters in the Bristol Channel can act as alternative nursery areas to those provided by the inshore shallows of the Severn Estuary.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Potter, I.C.
Claridge, P.N.
Hyndes, G.A.
Clarke, K.R.
spellingShingle Potter, I.C.
Claridge, P.N.
Hyndes, G.A.
Clarke, K.R.
Seasonal, annual and regional variations in ichthyofaunal composition in the inner Severn Estuary and inner Bristol Channel
author_facet Potter, I.C.
Claridge, P.N.
Hyndes, G.A.
Clarke, K.R.
author_sort Potter, I.C.
title Seasonal, annual and regional variations in ichthyofaunal composition in the inner Severn Estuary and inner Bristol Channel
title_short Seasonal, annual and regional variations in ichthyofaunal composition in the inner Severn Estuary and inner Bristol Channel
title_full Seasonal, annual and regional variations in ichthyofaunal composition in the inner Severn Estuary and inner Bristol Channel
title_fullStr Seasonal, annual and regional variations in ichthyofaunal composition in the inner Severn Estuary and inner Bristol Channel
title_full_unstemmed Seasonal, annual and regional variations in ichthyofaunal composition in the inner Severn Estuary and inner Bristol Channel
title_sort seasonal, annual and regional variations in ichthyofaunal composition in the inner severn estuary and inner bristol channel
publisher Cambridge University Press
publishDate 1997
url https://researchrepository.murdoch.edu.au/id/eprint/18594/
genre European eel
genre_facet European eel
op_source Potter, I.C. <https://researchrepository.murdoch.edu.au/view/author/Potter, Ian.html>, Claridge, P.N., Hyndes, G.A. <https://researchrepository.murdoch.edu.au/view/author/Hyndes, Glenn.html> and Clarke, K.R. <https://researchrepository.murdoch.edu.au/view/author/Clarke, Robert.html> (1997) Seasonal, annual and regional variations in ichthyofaunal composition in the inner Severn Estuary and inner Bristol Channel. Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom, 77 (02). pp. 507-525.
op_relation https://researchrepository.murdoch.edu.au/id/eprint/18594/
full_text_status:public
op_rights © Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom 1997
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