Composition of the fish fauna of a permanently open estuary on the southern coast of Australia, and comparisons with a nearby seasonally closed estuary

The fish faunas of the outer basin (Nornalup Inlet), inner basin (Walpole Inlet) and saline region of the main tributary (Frankland River) of the permanently open Nornalup-Walpole Estuary on the southern coast of Western Australia, were sampled bimonthly for a year using seine and gill nets, and als...

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Main Authors: Potter, I.C., Hyndes, G.A.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Springer Verlag 1994
Subjects:
Online Access:https://researchrepository.murdoch.edu.au/id/eprint/18666/
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spelling ftmurdochuniv:oai:researchrepository.murdoch.edu.au:18666 2023-05-15T13:39:53+02:00 Composition of the fish fauna of a permanently open estuary on the southern coast of Australia, and comparisons with a nearby seasonally closed estuary Potter, I.C. Hyndes, G.A. 1994 https://researchrepository.murdoch.edu.au/id/eprint/18666/ eng eng Springer Verlag https://researchrepository.murdoch.edu.au/id/eprint/18666/ full_text_status:none Potter, I.C. <https://researchrepository.murdoch.edu.au/view/author/Potter, Ian.html> and Hyndes, G.A. <https://researchrepository.murdoch.edu.au/view/author/Hyndes, Glenn.html> (1994) Composition of the fish fauna of a permanently open estuary on the southern coast of Australia, and comparisons with a nearby seasonally closed estuary. Marine Biology, 121 (2). pp. 199-209. Journal Article 1994 ftmurdochuniv 2020-01-05T18:50:19Z The fish faunas of the outer basin (Nornalup Inlet), inner basin (Walpole Inlet) and saline region of the main tributary (Frankland River) of the permanently open Nornalup-Walpole Estuary on the southern coast of Western Australia, were sampled bimonthly for a year using seine and gill nets, and also during a further two months by the former method. Although the Nornalup-Walpole Estuary is permanently open, the catches of fish in its shallows were dominated (98.4%) by estuarine-spawning species, thereby paralleling the situation in the nearby and seasonally closed Wilson Inlet. In contrast, larger representatives of several marine species were present in appreciable numbers in the offshore, deeper waters of both of these estuaries. The delayed recruitment of marine species into these estuaries apparently reflects the distance that the juveniles of these species have to travel from the areas where they are believed predominantly to spawn. The larger representatives of marine species made a greater contribution to the fish faunas of the offshore, deeper waters in the Nornalup-Walpole Estuary than in Wilson Inlet (64.5 vs 36.9%) and, unlike the situation in the latter estuary, they included five species of elasmobranchs, two of which (Mustelus antarcticus and Myliobatis australis) were relatively abundant. Classification and ordination of the combined data for both estuaries demonstrated that the composition of the fish fauna in the offshore, deeper waters of the outer basin of the Nornalup-Walpole Estuary was particularly distinct, with some marine species being restricted to these waters. This is presumably related both to the presence of a permanently open entrance channel and the relatively deep waters found in Nornalup Inlet, which allow the ready exchange of water between the sea and estuary and the maintenance of high salinities in the deeper regions of the outer basin for much of the year. The fish faunas in Walpole Inlet and the tributaries of both the Nornalup-Walpole Estuary and Wilson Inlet were more similar to each other than they were to those in the more seawards end of either estuary. This similarity reflects the apparent preference of certain teleosts, such as the estuarine species Acanthopagrus butcheri and the marine species Mugil cephalus and Aldrichetta forsteri for reduced salinities and/or features associated with riverine environments. Article in Journal/Newspaper Antarc* antarcticus Murdoch University: Murdoch Research Repository Wilson Inlet ENVELOPE(-129.896,-129.896,53.574,53.574)
institution Open Polar
collection Murdoch University: Murdoch Research Repository
op_collection_id ftmurdochuniv
language English
description The fish faunas of the outer basin (Nornalup Inlet), inner basin (Walpole Inlet) and saline region of the main tributary (Frankland River) of the permanently open Nornalup-Walpole Estuary on the southern coast of Western Australia, were sampled bimonthly for a year using seine and gill nets, and also during a further two months by the former method. Although the Nornalup-Walpole Estuary is permanently open, the catches of fish in its shallows were dominated (98.4%) by estuarine-spawning species, thereby paralleling the situation in the nearby and seasonally closed Wilson Inlet. In contrast, larger representatives of several marine species were present in appreciable numbers in the offshore, deeper waters of both of these estuaries. The delayed recruitment of marine species into these estuaries apparently reflects the distance that the juveniles of these species have to travel from the areas where they are believed predominantly to spawn. The larger representatives of marine species made a greater contribution to the fish faunas of the offshore, deeper waters in the Nornalup-Walpole Estuary than in Wilson Inlet (64.5 vs 36.9%) and, unlike the situation in the latter estuary, they included five species of elasmobranchs, two of which (Mustelus antarcticus and Myliobatis australis) were relatively abundant. Classification and ordination of the combined data for both estuaries demonstrated that the composition of the fish fauna in the offshore, deeper waters of the outer basin of the Nornalup-Walpole Estuary was particularly distinct, with some marine species being restricted to these waters. This is presumably related both to the presence of a permanently open entrance channel and the relatively deep waters found in Nornalup Inlet, which allow the ready exchange of water between the sea and estuary and the maintenance of high salinities in the deeper regions of the outer basin for much of the year. The fish faunas in Walpole Inlet and the tributaries of both the Nornalup-Walpole Estuary and Wilson Inlet were more similar to each other than they were to those in the more seawards end of either estuary. This similarity reflects the apparent preference of certain teleosts, such as the estuarine species Acanthopagrus butcheri and the marine species Mugil cephalus and Aldrichetta forsteri for reduced salinities and/or features associated with riverine environments.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Potter, I.C.
Hyndes, G.A.
spellingShingle Potter, I.C.
Hyndes, G.A.
Composition of the fish fauna of a permanently open estuary on the southern coast of Australia, and comparisons with a nearby seasonally closed estuary
author_facet Potter, I.C.
Hyndes, G.A.
author_sort Potter, I.C.
title Composition of the fish fauna of a permanently open estuary on the southern coast of Australia, and comparisons with a nearby seasonally closed estuary
title_short Composition of the fish fauna of a permanently open estuary on the southern coast of Australia, and comparisons with a nearby seasonally closed estuary
title_full Composition of the fish fauna of a permanently open estuary on the southern coast of Australia, and comparisons with a nearby seasonally closed estuary
title_fullStr Composition of the fish fauna of a permanently open estuary on the southern coast of Australia, and comparisons with a nearby seasonally closed estuary
title_full_unstemmed Composition of the fish fauna of a permanently open estuary on the southern coast of Australia, and comparisons with a nearby seasonally closed estuary
title_sort composition of the fish fauna of a permanently open estuary on the southern coast of australia, and comparisons with a nearby seasonally closed estuary
publisher Springer Verlag
publishDate 1994
url https://researchrepository.murdoch.edu.au/id/eprint/18666/
long_lat ENVELOPE(-129.896,-129.896,53.574,53.574)
geographic Wilson Inlet
geographic_facet Wilson Inlet
genre Antarc*
antarcticus
genre_facet Antarc*
antarcticus
op_source Potter, I.C. <https://researchrepository.murdoch.edu.au/view/author/Potter, Ian.html> and Hyndes, G.A. <https://researchrepository.murdoch.edu.au/view/author/Hyndes, Glenn.html> (1994) Composition of the fish fauna of a permanently open estuary on the southern coast of Australia, and comparisons with a nearby seasonally closed estuary. Marine Biology, 121 (2). pp. 199-209.
op_relation https://researchrepository.murdoch.edu.au/id/eprint/18666/
full_text_status:none
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