Short-term effects of a low dissolved oxygen event on estuarine fish assemblages following the passage of hurricane Charley |
| |
Authors: | Philip W Stevens David A Blewett J Patrick Casey |
| |
Institution: | 1. Fish and Wildlife Research Institute, Charlotte Harbor Field Laboratory, Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission, 1481 Market Circle Unit 1, 33953, Port Charlotte, Florida
|
| |
Abstract: | Hurricane Charley, a category 4 storm, passed directly over the Charlotte Harbor estuary and Peace River watershed on August
13, 2004. Following the storm's passage, dissolved oxygen in the Peace River fell below 1 mg l−1 and hypoxic conditions (<2mgl−1) extended into Charlotte Harbor. A long-term fisheries-independent monitoring program (1989 to present) was already in place
in Charlotte Harbor, and sampling was intensified during the month after the storm. Changes in fish assemblages that resulted
from the hypoxic event were determined using nonmetric multidimensional scaling and similarity percentages analysis. At the
mouth of the Peace River and upper Charlotte Harbor, fish abundance decreased dramatically after the hurricane, and typical
estuarine fish assemblages were replaced by those dominated by a few resilient estuarine and freshwater species, including
the nonindigenous brown hoplo (Hoplosternum littorale) and sailfin catfish (Pterygoplichthys spp.). Fish assemblages in the estuarine portion of the Maykka River, located only a few kilometers west of the Peace River,
were unaffected. The hypoxic event was short lived; dissolved oxygen and estuarine fish assemblages in the Peace River and
upper Charlotte Harbor recovered within a month. The results of this study are consistent with other hurricane-related hypoxic
events in the literature which have reported acute effects to estuarine systems in the short term, rapid recoveries, and long-term
resilience. |
| |
Keywords: | |
本文献已被 SpringerLink 等数据库收录! |
|