Hostname: page-component-8448b6f56d-wq2xx Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-23T13:02:45.917Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Seasonal, annual and regional variations in ichthyofaunal composition in the inner Severn Estuary and inner Bristol Channel

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 October 2009

I.C. Potter
Affiliation:
School of Biological and Environmental Sciences, Murdoch University, Perth, 6150, Western Australia.
P.N. Claridge
Affiliation:
Plymouth Marine Laboratory, Prospect Place, West Hoe, Plymouth, PLI 3DH
G.A. Hyndes
Affiliation:
School of Biological and Environmental Sciences, Murdoch University, Perth, 6150, Western Australia.
K.R. Clarke
Affiliation:
Plymouth Marine Laboratory, Prospect Place, West Hoe, Plymouth, PLI 3DH

Abstract

Monthly samples of fish from the intake screens of power stations at Oldbury and Berkeley in the inner Severn Estuary and Hinkley Point in the inner Bristol Channel, were used to analyse the community structures of the ichthyofauna in these regions. Marine species that use the estuary as a nursery area (marine estuarine-opportunists) were very abundant in the shallow inshore waters at Oldbury. Diadromous species were more abundant in the offshore and deeper waters at Berkeley than at Oldbury. Only one of the two species that complete their life cycles in the estuary was even moderately abundant in the inner estuary and the 15 freshwater species were relatively rare. Bass and particularly the sand goby complex were more numerous in the protected, inshore waters than the more offshore waters of the estuary. With the yellow and silver stages of the European eel, the reverse situation pertained. Seasonal changes in faunal composition were more pronounced in the inshore shallow than in more offshore deeper waters of the estuary. This largely reflected the sequential immigration of large numbers of the juveniles of marine estuarine-opportunist species into the former area for relatively short periods. Although the ichthyofaunal composition in the shallows at Oldbury underwent the same pattern of cyclical variation in each of five consecutive years, the degree of intra-annual variability differed, reflecting interannual differences in the recruitment strengths of the 0+ age classes of the different marine estuarine-opportunists. These cyclical changes were not correlated strongly with either salinity or water temperature. The faunal composition of the protected inshore, more marine waters of the inner Bristol Channel differed from those in both inshore and offshore regions of the inner estuary. The species which typified the fauna of the Channel were bib, poor cod, five-bearded rockling, sole and conger eel. Although the first four of these species were relatively more abundant in these waters than in the estuary, their juveniles often made extensive use of the shallows at Oldbury. This study emphasizes that, for some marine species, the protected inshore, and more marine, waters in the Bristol Channel can act as alternative nursery areas to those provided by the inshore shallows of the Severn Estuary.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom 1997

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

REFERENCES

Abou-Seedo, F.S. & Potter, I.C., 1979. The estuarine phase in the spawning run of the river lamprey Lampetra fluviatilis. Journal of Zoology, 188, 525.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Badsha, K.S. & Sainsbury, M., 1978. Some aspects of the biology and heavy metal accumulation of the fish Liparis liparis in the Severn Estuary. Estuarine and Coastal Marine Science, 7, 381391.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Beamish, F.W.H., 1974. Swimming performance of adult sea lamprey, Petromyzon marinus, in relation to weight and temperature. Transactions of the American Fisheries Society, 2, 355358.2.0.CO;2>CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Belbin, L., 1993. PATN pattern analysis package: technical reference. Canberra: CSIRO Division of Wildlife & Ecology.Google Scholar
Blaber, S.J.M., 1987. Factors affecting recruitment and survival of mugilids in estuaries and coastal waters of southeastern Africa. In Common strategies of anadromous and catadromous fishes (ed. Dadswell, M.J. et al. ), pp. 507518. Bethesda: American Fisheries Society. [Symposium 1.]Google Scholar
Blaber, S.J.M., Brewer, D.T. & Salini, J.P., 1989. Species composition and biomasses of fishes in different habitats of a tropical northern Australian estuary: their occurrence in the adjoining sea and estuarine dependence. Estuarine and Coastal Shelf Science, 29, 509531.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chubb, C.F., Potter, I.C., Grant, C.J., Lenanton, R.C.J. & Wallace, J., 1981. Age structure, growth rates and movements of sea mullet, Mugil cephalus L., and yellow-eye mullet, Aldrichetta forsteri (Valenciennes), in the Swan-Avon river system, Western Australia. Australian Journal of Marine and Freshwater Research, 32, 605628.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Claridge, P.N., Hardisty, M.W., Potter, I.C. & Williams, C.V., 1985. Abundance, life history and ligulosis in the gobies (Teleostei) of the inner Severn Estuary. Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom, 65, 951968.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Claridge, P.N., Potter, I.C. & Hardisty, M.W., 1986. Seasonal changes in movements, abundance, size composition and diversity of the fish fauna of the Severn Estuary. Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom, 66, 229258.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Claridge, P.N. & Potter, I.C, 1983. Movements, abundance, age composition and growth of bass, Dicentrachus labrax, in the Severn Estuary and inner Bristol Channel. Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom, 63, 871879.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Claridge, P.N. & Potter, I.C, 1984. Abundance, movements and size of gadoids (Teleostei) in the Severn Estuary. Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom, 64, 771790.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Claridge, P.N. & Potter, I.C, 1985. Distribution, abundance and size composition of mullet populations in the Severn Estuary and Bristol Channel. Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom, 65, 325335.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Clarke, K.R., 1993. Non-parametric multivariate analyses of changes in community structure. Australian Journal of Ecology, 18, 117143.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Clarke, K.R. & Ainsworth, M., 1993. A method of linking multivariate community structure to environmental variables. Marine Ecology Progress Series, 92, 205219.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Clarke, K.R. & Green, R.H., 1988. Statistical design and analysis for a ‘biological effects’ study. Marine Ecology Progress Series, 46, 213226.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Clarke, K.R. & Warwick, R.M., 1994. Change in marine communities. An approach to statistical analysis and interpretation. Plymouth: Plymouth Marine Laboratory.Google Scholar
Cronin, L.E. & Mansueti, A.J., 1971. The biology of the estuary. In Proceedings of a Symposium on the biological significance of estuaries (ed. Douglas, P. A. and Stroud, R.H.), pp. 1439. Washington, DC: Sports Fishing Institute.Google Scholar
Dando, P.R., 1984. Reproduction in estuarine fish. In Fish reproduction: strategies and tactics (ed. Potts, G.W. and Wootton, R.J.), pp. 155170. London: Academic Press.Google Scholar
Deegan, L.A. & Thompson, G.A., 1985. The ecology of fish communities in the Mississippi River deltaic plain. In Fish community ecology in estuaries and coastal lagoons (ed. Yanez-Arancibia, A.), pp. 3556. Mexico: DR (R) UNAM Press.Google Scholar
Gill, H.S. & Potter, I.C., 1993. Spatial segregation amongst goby species within an Australian estuary, with a comparison of the diets and salinity tolerance of the two most abundant species. Marine Biology, 117, 515526.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Haedrich, R.L., 1983. Estuarine fishes. In Ecosystems of the world: 26 estuaries and enclosed seas (ed. Ketchum, B.H.), pp. 183207. Amsterdam: Elsevier.Google Scholar
Hardisty, M.W. & Badsha, K.S., 1986. Seasonal abundance, growth, feeding and age composition of flounder (Platichthys flesus (L.)) populations of the Severn Estuary and Bristol Channel. International Journal of Environmental Studies, 27, 89114.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hedgpeth, J.W., 1982. Estuarine dependence and colonisation. Atlantica, 5, 5758.Google Scholar
Henderson, P.A., 1989. On the structure of the inshore fish community of England and Wales. Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom, 69, 145163.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Henderson, P.A. & Holmes, R.H.A., 1991. On the population dynamics of dab, sole and flounder within Bridgwater Bay in the lower Severn Estuary, England. Netherlands Journal of Sea Research, 27, 337344.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Henderson, P.A., James, D. & Holmes, R.H.A., 1992. Trophic structure within the Bristol Channel: seasonality and stability in Bridgwater Bay. Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom, 72, 675690.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Henderson, P. A. & Seaby, R.M.H., 1994. On the factors influencing juvenile flatfish abundance in the lower Severn Estuary, England. Netherlands Journal of Sea Research, 32, 321330.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hyndes, G.A., Potter, I.C. & Lenanton, R.C.J., 1996. Habitat partitioning of whiting species (Sillaginidae) in coastal waters. Environmental Biology of Fishes, 45, 2140.Google Scholar
Kennish, M.J., 1990. Ecology of estuaries. Vol 2. Biological aspects. Boca Raton: CRC Press.Google Scholar
Lenanton, R.C.J., 1982. Alternative non-estuarine nursery habitats for some commercially and recreationally important fish species of south-western Australia. Australian Journal of Marine and Freshwater Research, 33, 881900.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lenanton, R.C.J. & Potter, I.C, 1987. Contribution of estuaries to commercial fisheries in temperate Western Australia and the concept of estuarine dependence. Estuaries, 10, 2835.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Loneragan, N.R., Potter, I.C. & Lenanton, R.C.J., 1989. Influence of site, season and year on contributions made by marine, estuarine, diadromous and freshwater species to the fish fauna of a temperate Australian estuary. Marine Biology, 103, 461479.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Loneragan, N.R., Potter, I.C., Lenanton, R.C.J. & Caputi, N., 1986. Spatial and seasonal differences in the fish fauna in the shallows of a large Australian estuary. Marine Biology, 92, 575586.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
McDowell, R.M., 1988. Diadromy in fishes. Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
McLusky, D.S., 1989. The estuarine ecosystem. Glasgow/London: Blackie.Google Scholar
Moore, J.W. & Moore, I.A., 1976. The basis of food selection in some estuarine fishes. Eels, Anguilla anguilla, whiting, Merlangius merlangus, sprat, Sprattus sprattus and stickleback, Gasterosteus aculeatus. Journal of Fish Biology, 9, 375390.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Moore, J.W., Moore, L.A. & Claridge, P.N., 1979. Seasonal changes in density, composition and reproductive biology of crustacean populations in the Severn Estuary. Crustaceana, 36, 113122.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Potter, I.C., Beckley, L.E., Whitfield, A.K. & Lenanton, R.C.J., 1990. Comparisons between the roles played by estuaries in the life cycles of fishes in temperate Western Australia and southern Africa. Environmental Biology of Fishes, 28, 143178.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Potter, I.C. & Claridge, P.N., 1985. Seasonal catches, size and meristic data for sprat, Sprattus sprattus, in the Severn Estuary. Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom, 65, 667675.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Potter, I.C., Claridge, P.N. & Warwick, R.M., 1986. Consistency of seasonal changes in an estuarine fish assemblage. Marine Ecology Progress Series, 32, 217228.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Potter, I.C., Gardner, D.C. & Claridge, P.N., 1988. Age composition, growth, movements, meristics and parasites of the whiting, Merlangius merlangus, in the Severn Estuary and Bristol Channel. Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom, 68, 295313.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Potter, I.C. & Hyndes, G.A., 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, 199209.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Potter, I.C, Hyndes, G.A. & Baronie, F.M., 1993. The fish fauna of a seasonally closed Australian estuary. Is the prevalence of estuarine-spawning species high? Marine Biology, 116, 1930.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Radford, P.J. & Joint, I.R., 1980. The application of an ecosystem model to the Bristol Channel and Severn Estuary. Water Pollution Control, 78, 244254.Google Scholar
Ruiz, G.M., Hines, A.H. & Posey, M.H., 1993. Shallow water as a refuge habitat for fish and crustaceans in non-vegetated estuaries: an example from Chesapeake Bay. Marine Ecology Progress Series, 99, 116.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Schelske, C.L. & Odum, E.P., 1970. Mechanisms maintaining high productivity in Georgian estuaries. Proceedings of the Gulf and Carribean Fish Institute, 14, 7580.Google Scholar
Somerfield, P.J. & Clarke, K.R., 1997. A comparison of some methods commonly used for the collection of sublittoral sediments and their associated fauna. Marine Environmental Research, 13, 145156.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ter Braak, C.J.F., 1988. CANOCO - a Fortran program for canonical community ordination by (partial) (detrended) (canonical) correspondence analysis, principal components analysis and redundancy analysis (version 3.10). Wageningen, The Netherlands: TNO Institute, Applied Computer Science and Statistics Department.Google Scholar
Titmus, G., Claridge, P.N. & Potter, I.C, 1978. Growth and abundance of o-group herrings, Clupea harengus L., in the Severn Estuary. Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society, 64, 251260.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Whitfield, A.K., 1994. Fish species diversity in southern African estuarine systems: an evolutionary perspective. Environmental Biology of Fishes, 40, 3748.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Yoklavich, M.M., Cailliet, G.M., Barry, J.P., Ambrose, D.A. & Antrim, B.S., 1991. Temporal and spatial patterns in abundance and diversity of fish assemblages in Elkhorn Slough, California. Estuaries, 14, 465480.CrossRefGoogle Scholar