Dynamics of early juvenile winter flounder predation risk on a North West Atlantic estuarine nursery ground

In an effort to determine the characteristics of estuarine habitats suitable for early juvenile winter flounder Pseudopleuronectes americanus survivorship, we examined piscivorous fish distributions and diets, and flounder predation risk along estuarine gradients in the Navesink River/Sandy Hook Bay...

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Main Authors: Manderson, JP, Pessutti, J, Shaheen, P, Juanes, F
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: ScholarWorks@UMass Amherst 2006
Subjects:
Online Access:https://scholarworks.umass.edu/nrc_faculty_pubs/197
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spelling ftunivmassamh:oai:scholarworks.umass.edu:nrc_faculty_pubs-1196 2023-05-15T17:40:23+02:00 Dynamics of early juvenile winter flounder predation risk on a North West Atlantic estuarine nursery ground Manderson, JP Pessutti, J Shaheen, P Juanes, F 2006-01-01T08:00:00Z https://scholarworks.umass.edu/nrc_faculty_pubs/197 unknown ScholarWorks@UMass Amherst https://scholarworks.umass.edu/nrc_faculty_pubs/197 Environmental Conservation Faculty Publication Series nursery habitat dynamics predation risk essential fish habitat text 2006 ftunivmassamh 2022-09-08T17:45:21Z In an effort to determine the characteristics of estuarine habitats suitable for early juvenile winter flounder Pseudopleuronectes americanus survivorship, we examined piscivorous fish distributions and diets, and flounder predation risk along estuarine gradients in the Navesink River/Sandy Hook Bay estuarine system, New Jersey, USA. Demersal fish, striped searobin Prionotus evolans and summer flounder Paralichthys dentatus, were more important predators of winter flounder than pelagic fish (Pomatomus saltatrix, Cynoscion regalis, Morone saxatilis) based on diet analysis of 4 yr of gill (1998 and 1999) and trammel net (2001 and 2002) fish collections. From April through June newly settled winter flounder <20 mm standard length (SL) were eaten by striped searobin that were common in habitats with salinities ≥ 20‰. Fish >20 mm standard length (SL) were consumed by summer flounder in shallow habitats in June and July. In May and June tethering experiments, Age-0 winter flounder predation risk was high in habitats with salinities >19‰ and temperatures >20°C. In 3 yr, salinities were <20‰ in the upstream reach of estuary which probably served as a predator refuge for settling flounder. During 2002, however, historically low freshwater discharge associated with a spring drought produced high salinities ≥20‰ in upstream habitats where searobins ate large numbers of settling winter flounder and predation risk was high. These results suggest that the volume of estuarine habitat suitable for early juvenile flounder survivorship is determined, in part, by predator and prey responses to spatially dynamic physico-chemical gradients. Because gradient dynamics are controlled by climate forcing, climate variation may cause nursery habitat volumes to contract or expand resulting in variation in the local production of Age-0 recruits. Text North West Atlantic University of Massachusetts: ScholarWorks@UMass Amherst Sandy Hook ENVELOPE(-55.798,-55.798,52.533,52.533)
institution Open Polar
collection University of Massachusetts: ScholarWorks@UMass Amherst
op_collection_id ftunivmassamh
language unknown
topic nursery habitat dynamics
predation risk
essential fish habitat
spellingShingle nursery habitat dynamics
predation risk
essential fish habitat
Manderson, JP
Pessutti, J
Shaheen, P
Juanes, F
Dynamics of early juvenile winter flounder predation risk on a North West Atlantic estuarine nursery ground
topic_facet nursery habitat dynamics
predation risk
essential fish habitat
description In an effort to determine the characteristics of estuarine habitats suitable for early juvenile winter flounder Pseudopleuronectes americanus survivorship, we examined piscivorous fish distributions and diets, and flounder predation risk along estuarine gradients in the Navesink River/Sandy Hook Bay estuarine system, New Jersey, USA. Demersal fish, striped searobin Prionotus evolans and summer flounder Paralichthys dentatus, were more important predators of winter flounder than pelagic fish (Pomatomus saltatrix, Cynoscion regalis, Morone saxatilis) based on diet analysis of 4 yr of gill (1998 and 1999) and trammel net (2001 and 2002) fish collections. From April through June newly settled winter flounder <20 mm standard length (SL) were eaten by striped searobin that were common in habitats with salinities ≥ 20‰. Fish >20 mm standard length (SL) were consumed by summer flounder in shallow habitats in June and July. In May and June tethering experiments, Age-0 winter flounder predation risk was high in habitats with salinities >19‰ and temperatures >20°C. In 3 yr, salinities were <20‰ in the upstream reach of estuary which probably served as a predator refuge for settling flounder. During 2002, however, historically low freshwater discharge associated with a spring drought produced high salinities ≥20‰ in upstream habitats where searobins ate large numbers of settling winter flounder and predation risk was high. These results suggest that the volume of estuarine habitat suitable for early juvenile flounder survivorship is determined, in part, by predator and prey responses to spatially dynamic physico-chemical gradients. Because gradient dynamics are controlled by climate forcing, climate variation may cause nursery habitat volumes to contract or expand resulting in variation in the local production of Age-0 recruits.
format Text
author Manderson, JP
Pessutti, J
Shaheen, P
Juanes, F
author_facet Manderson, JP
Pessutti, J
Shaheen, P
Juanes, F
author_sort Manderson, JP
title Dynamics of early juvenile winter flounder predation risk on a North West Atlantic estuarine nursery ground
title_short Dynamics of early juvenile winter flounder predation risk on a North West Atlantic estuarine nursery ground
title_full Dynamics of early juvenile winter flounder predation risk on a North West Atlantic estuarine nursery ground
title_fullStr Dynamics of early juvenile winter flounder predation risk on a North West Atlantic estuarine nursery ground
title_full_unstemmed Dynamics of early juvenile winter flounder predation risk on a North West Atlantic estuarine nursery ground
title_sort dynamics of early juvenile winter flounder predation risk on a north west atlantic estuarine nursery ground
publisher ScholarWorks@UMass Amherst
publishDate 2006
url https://scholarworks.umass.edu/nrc_faculty_pubs/197
long_lat ENVELOPE(-55.798,-55.798,52.533,52.533)
geographic Sandy Hook
geographic_facet Sandy Hook
genre North West Atlantic
genre_facet North West Atlantic
op_source Environmental Conservation Faculty Publication Series
op_relation https://scholarworks.umass.edu/nrc_faculty_pubs/197
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