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Spatial and temporal variation in fish community of a marine embayment in Zanzibar, Tanzania. Hydrobiologia

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dc.creator Lugendo, B.R.
dc.creator Groene, A.
dc.creator Cornelissen, I.
dc.creator Pronker, A.
dc.creator Nagelkerken, I.
dc.creator Van der Velde, G.
dc.creator Mgaya, Yunus D.
dc.date 2016-01-29T05:17:44Z
dc.date 2016-01-29T05:17:44Z
dc.date 2007-07
dc.date.accessioned 2018-04-18T11:49:29Z
dc.date.available 2018-04-18T11:49:29Z
dc.identifier Lugendo, B.R., de Groene, A., , Cornelissen, I., Pronker, A., Nagelkerken, I., der Velde, G., and Mgaya, Y.D., 2007. Spatial and temporal variation in fish community of a marine embayment in Zanzibar, Tanzania. Hydrobiologia 586: 1-16
dc.identifier 0018-8158
dc.identifier 10.1007/s10750-006-0398-3
dc.identifier http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/222
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/9923
dc.description Spatial and temporal variation in the fish community structure were studied in a tropical non-estuarine embayment in Chwaka Bay, Zanzibar (Tanzania). Fish samples were collected bi-monthly (at each spring low tide) for 1 year (November 2001–October 2002) from a range of bay habitats ranging from mangroves deep inside the bay to seagrass beds close to the mouth of the bay. Additionally, environmental variables were examined to determine their relationship with the fish community structure. Being a non-estuarine embayment, the environmental variables as well as the fish community structure in each habitat remained relatively constant for most part of the year; however, a marked decline was observed during the rainy period (April–May). Significant variations in fish community variables (density, biomass and species richness) and in water temperature and salinity were observed during the rainy season in all habitats, with larger changes in the mangrove and mud/sand flats habitats than in the seagrass beds. Seasonal variations in water clarity and dissolved oxygen were not significant, though. Many species disappeared from the mangrove and mud/sand flats habitats during the rainy season and those which persisted showed a remarkable decrease in density. Moreover, the results indicate that mangroves were the preferred settling habitats for Gerres filamentosus, Gerres oyena, Lethrinus lentjan and Monodactylus argenteus, especially during the dry period (December–February) before the rainy season. This observation is contrary to what has been reported from some other tropical regions where greater abundance and species richness was observed during the rainy season. A significant relationship was found between density of fish and temperature, salinity and turbidity. Since salinity was the most conspicuously changing environmental variable with seasons, we propose that salinity, alone or in combination with low visibility and temperature, was probably the most important environmental factor structuring the fish assemblage in the mangrove and mud/sand flats habitats, particularly during the rainy season.
dc.language en
dc.publisher Kluwer Academic Publishers
dc.subject Juvenile fish
dc.subject Spatial-temporal variation
dc.subject Community structure
dc.subject Mangroves
dc.subject Seagrasses
dc.subject Indian Ocean
dc.title Spatial and temporal variation in fish community of a marine embayment in Zanzibar, Tanzania. Hydrobiologia
dc.type Journal Article, Peer Reviewed


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