Demersal fishes in a tropical bay in southeastern Brazil: Partitioning the spatial, temporal and environmental components of ecological variation |
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Authors: | M rcia Cristina Costa de Azevedo, Francisco Gerson Araú jo, Ant nio Gomes da Cruz-Filho, Andr Luiz Machado Pessanha, M rcio de Araú jo Silva,Ana Paula Penha Guedes |
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Affiliation: | aUniversidade Federal Rural do Rio de Janeiro, Laboratório de Ecologia de Peixes, Km 47 da Antiga Rodovia Rio, São Paulo, Seropédica, RJ 23851-970, Brazil;bFIPERJ – Fundação Instituto de Pesca do Estado do Rio de Janeiro, Estação de Aqüicultura Almirante Paulo Moreira, Avenida das Américas, 31501 Guaratiba, Rio de Janeiro, RJ 23032-050, Brazil |
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Abstract: | This study analyzed the factors structuring demersal fish community in a tropical bay in southeastern Brazil. The results were used to quantify the partitioning of ecological variation among the environmental, spatial and temporal components molding the fish community. Three bay zones (inner, middle and outer) were defined according to depth and salinity gradient. Monthly samplings were conducted by bottom trawl tows during daylight hours, between October 1998 and September 1999. In each zone, three replicate samples were taken. Ninety-three fish species from 73 genera and 37 families were recorded in the 108 samples. Two demersal fish assemblages were evidenced, one in the inner and the other in the outer zone. These assemblages were characterized by changes in species composition and relative abundance. Depth, followed by transparency and salinity, influenced spatial pattern of fish assemblages. The largest part of the explained variation occurred as a result of the spatial structure of environmental variables, which means that both species and environmental variables presented similar spatial structure. The spatial effect, not the seasonal, explained the highest part of species variations. The amount of unexplained variation was relatively high (76%), even assuming that part of it is due to nondeterministic fluctuation, which could be due to local effects of unmeasured (biotic and abiotic) controlling variables. Knowing the relative importance of these factors can be of decisive importance when applying casual hypotheses in the framework of some precise ecological theory and should facilitate management, planning, and usage of bay resources. |
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Keywords: | fishes assemblages bay Brazil variation partitioning environmental gradient |
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