Benthic invertebrates that form habitat on deep banks off southern California, with special reference to deep sea coral

There is increasing interest in the potential impacts that fishing activities have on megafaunal benthic invertebrates occurring in continental shelf and slope ecosystems. We examined how the structure, size, and high-density aggregations of invertebrates provided structural relief for fishes in continental shelf and slope ecosystems off southern California. We made 112 dives in a submersible at 32−320 m water depth, surveying a variety of habitats from high-relief rock to flat sand and mud. Using quantitative video transect methods, we made 12,360 observations of 15 structure-form-ing invertebrate taxa and 521,898 individuals. We estimated size and incidence of epizoic animals on 9105 sponges, black corals, and gorgonians. Size variation among structure-form-ing invertebrates was significant and 90% of the individuals were <0.5 m high. Less than 1% of the observations of organisms actually sheltering in or located on invertebrates involved fishes. From the analysis of spatial associations between fishes and large invertebrates, six of 108 fish species were found more often adjacent to invertebrate colonies than the number of fish predicted by the fish-density data from transects. This finding indicates that there may be spatial associations that do not necessarily include physical contact with the sponges and corals. However, the median distances between these six fish species and the invertebrates were not particularly small (1.0−5.5 m). Thus, it is likely that these fishes and invertebrates are present together in the same habitats but that there is not necessarily a functional relationship between these groups of organisms. Regardless of their associations with fishes, these invertebrates provide structure and diversity for continental shelf ecosystems off southern California and certainly deserve the attention of scientists undertaking future conservation efforts.

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Main Authors: Tissot, Brian N., Yoklavich, Mary M., Love, Milton S., York, Keri, Amend, Mark
Format: article biblioteca
Language:English
Published: 2006
Subjects:Biology, Ecology, Fisheries,
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1834/25600
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spelling dig-aquadocs-1834-256002021-06-30T02:26:06Z Benthic invertebrates that form habitat on deep banks off southern California, with special reference to deep sea coral Tissot, Brian N. Yoklavich, Mary M. Love, Milton S. York, Keri Amend, Mark Biology Ecology Fisheries There is increasing interest in the potential impacts that fishing activities have on megafaunal benthic invertebrates occurring in continental shelf and slope ecosystems. We examined how the structure, size, and high-density aggregations of invertebrates provided structural relief for fishes in continental shelf and slope ecosystems off southern California. We made 112 dives in a submersible at 32−320 m water depth, surveying a variety of habitats from high-relief rock to flat sand and mud. Using quantitative video transect methods, we made 12,360 observations of 15 structure-form-ing invertebrate taxa and 521,898 individuals. We estimated size and incidence of epizoic animals on 9105 sponges, black corals, and gorgonians. Size variation among structure-form-ing invertebrates was significant and 90% of the individuals were <0.5 m high. Less than 1% of the observations of organisms actually sheltering in or located on invertebrates involved fishes. From the analysis of spatial associations between fishes and large invertebrates, six of 108 fish species were found more often adjacent to invertebrate colonies than the number of fish predicted by the fish-density data from transects. This finding indicates that there may be spatial associations that do not necessarily include physical contact with the sponges and corals. However, the median distances between these six fish species and the invertebrates were not particularly small (1.0−5.5 m). Thus, it is likely that these fishes and invertebrates are present together in the same habitats but that there is not necessarily a functional relationship between these groups of organisms. Regardless of their associations with fishes, these invertebrates provide structure and diversity for continental shelf ecosystems off southern California and certainly deserve the attention of scientists undertaking future conservation efforts. 2021-06-24T16:21:13Z 2021-06-24T16:21:13Z 2006 article TRUE 0090-0656 http://hdl.handle.net/1834/25600 en http://fishbull.noaa.gov/1042/tissot.pdf application/pdf application/pdf 167-181 http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/8988 403 2012-08-03 18:38:35 8988 United States National Marine Fisheries Service
institution UNESCO
collection DSpace
country Francia
countrycode FR
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-aquadocs
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname Repositorio AQUADOCS
language English
topic Biology
Ecology
Fisheries
Biology
Ecology
Fisheries
spellingShingle Biology
Ecology
Fisheries
Biology
Ecology
Fisheries
Tissot, Brian N.
Yoklavich, Mary M.
Love, Milton S.
York, Keri
Amend, Mark
Benthic invertebrates that form habitat on deep banks off southern California, with special reference to deep sea coral
description There is increasing interest in the potential impacts that fishing activities have on megafaunal benthic invertebrates occurring in continental shelf and slope ecosystems. We examined how the structure, size, and high-density aggregations of invertebrates provided structural relief for fishes in continental shelf and slope ecosystems off southern California. We made 112 dives in a submersible at 32−320 m water depth, surveying a variety of habitats from high-relief rock to flat sand and mud. Using quantitative video transect methods, we made 12,360 observations of 15 structure-form-ing invertebrate taxa and 521,898 individuals. We estimated size and incidence of epizoic animals on 9105 sponges, black corals, and gorgonians. Size variation among structure-form-ing invertebrates was significant and 90% of the individuals were <0.5 m high. Less than 1% of the observations of organisms actually sheltering in or located on invertebrates involved fishes. From the analysis of spatial associations between fishes and large invertebrates, six of 108 fish species were found more often adjacent to invertebrate colonies than the number of fish predicted by the fish-density data from transects. This finding indicates that there may be spatial associations that do not necessarily include physical contact with the sponges and corals. However, the median distances between these six fish species and the invertebrates were not particularly small (1.0−5.5 m). Thus, it is likely that these fishes and invertebrates are present together in the same habitats but that there is not necessarily a functional relationship between these groups of organisms. Regardless of their associations with fishes, these invertebrates provide structure and diversity for continental shelf ecosystems off southern California and certainly deserve the attention of scientists undertaking future conservation efforts.
format article
topic_facet Biology
Ecology
Fisheries
author Tissot, Brian N.
Yoklavich, Mary M.
Love, Milton S.
York, Keri
Amend, Mark
author_facet Tissot, Brian N.
Yoklavich, Mary M.
Love, Milton S.
York, Keri
Amend, Mark
author_sort Tissot, Brian N.
title Benthic invertebrates that form habitat on deep banks off southern California, with special reference to deep sea coral
title_short Benthic invertebrates that form habitat on deep banks off southern California, with special reference to deep sea coral
title_full Benthic invertebrates that form habitat on deep banks off southern California, with special reference to deep sea coral
title_fullStr Benthic invertebrates that form habitat on deep banks off southern California, with special reference to deep sea coral
title_full_unstemmed Benthic invertebrates that form habitat on deep banks off southern California, with special reference to deep sea coral
title_sort benthic invertebrates that form habitat on deep banks off southern california, with special reference to deep sea coral
publishDate 2006
url http://hdl.handle.net/1834/25600
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