Consistencies in the dietary and isotopic niche of spotted seatrout, Cynoscion nebulosus, across a salinity gradient within a coastal Louisiana estuary

Author:

MacRae Pamela S. D.1,Russell Micah2,Cowan James H.3,Fry Brian4,Moyo Sydney5,Polito Michael J.3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. College of Arts and Sciences University of Maine at Augusta Augusta Maine USA

2. School of Environment and Sustainability Western Colorado University Gunnison Colorado USA

3. Department of Oceanography and Coastal Sciences Louisiana State University Baton Rouge Louisiana USA

4. Australian Rivers Institute, Griffith University Brisbane Queensland Australia

5. Department of Biological Sciences Louisiana State University Baton Rouge Louisiana USA

Abstract

AbstractEstuaries are essential habitats for recreational and commercial fish that are shaped by both natural and anthropogenic processes. In Louisiana a combination of climate change and planned coastal restoration actions is predicted to increase freshwater introduction to coastal estuaries. As such there is a need to quantify the relationships between estuarine fish ecology and salinity to aid in predicting how species will respond to shifts in salinity. We investigated the relative abundance and dietary niches of adult (24.5 ± 5.4 cm standard length) spotted seatrout Cynoscion nebulosus across varying salinity regimes (oligohaline, mesohaline, and polyhaline) within Barataria Bay, Louisiana, using a combination of net sampling and gut content and stable isotopes analysis. We found that the relative abundance of C. nebulosus was lowest at the oligohaline site, translating to approximately five fewer fish captured for every single psu decrease in a site's average annual salinity. In contrast, we found that diets and, to a lesser extent, isotopic niches had a high degree of overlap across sites with differing salinity regimes. Fish and penaeid shrimp were the most common and important prey taxa recovered from guts at all sites. The small isotopic differences found among sites were likely due to spatial variation in hydrogeochemical baselines, and the observed isotopic overlap provides support for the idea that C. nebulosus move between adjacent salinity regimes and forage throughout Barataria Bay. Our results contribute to a greater understanding of the salinity preference and trophic ecology of C. nebulosus that can aid in predicting their responses to future salinity and habitat changes within Barataria Bay associated with predicted climate change and planned coastal restoration actions.

Funder

Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries

Sigma Xia

Gulf Research Program

Publisher

Wiley

Reference89 articles.

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3. Baer A. M.(2019).Population dynamics and demographics of spotted seatrout Cynoscion nebulosus through spatial analysis: Towards an integrative management approach. Doctoral Dissertation Louisiana State University 4831.

4. Food, density, and microhabitat: factors affecting growth and recruitment potential of juvenile saltmarsh fishes

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