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Drifting algae and fish: Implications of tropical Sargassum invasion due to ocean warming in western Japan

Evidence is accumulating that the invasion and extinction of habitat-forming seaweed species alters coastal community structure and ecological services, but their effects on the pelagic environment have been largely ignored. Thus, we examined the seasonal occurrence patterns of indigenous temperate...

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Published in:Estuarine, coastal and shelf science coastal and shelf science, 2014-06, Vol.147, p.32-41
Main Authors: Yamasaki, Mami, Aono, Mikina, Ogawa, Naoto, Tanaka, Koichiro, Imoto, Zenji, Nakamura, Yohei
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container_title Estuarine, coastal and shelf science
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description Evidence is accumulating that the invasion and extinction of habitat-forming seaweed species alters coastal community structure and ecological services, but their effects on the pelagic environment have been largely ignored. Thus, we examined the seasonal occurrence patterns of indigenous temperate and invasive tropical drifting algae and associated fish species every month for 2 years (2009–2011) in western Japan (Tosa Bay), where a rapid shift from temperate to tropical Sargassum species has been occurring in the coastal area since the late 1980s due to rising seawater temperatures. Of the 19 Sargassum species (31.6%) in drifting algae, we found that six were tropical species, whereas a study in the early 1980s found only one tropical species among 12 species (8.3%), thereby suggesting an increase in the proportion of tropical Sargassum species in drifting algae during the last 30 years. Drifting temperate algae were abundantly present from late winter to summer, whereas tropical algal clumps occurred primarily during summer. In the warm season, fish assemblages did not differ significantly between drifting temperate and tropical algae, suggesting the low host–algal specificity of most fishes. We also found that yellowtail juveniles frequently aggregated with drifting temperate algae from late winter to spring when drifting tropical algae were unavailable. Local fishermen collect these juveniles for use as aquaculture seed stock; therefore, the occurrence of drifting temperate algae in early spring is important for local fisheries. These results suggest that the further extinction of temperate Sargassum spp. may have negative impacts on the pelagic ecosystem and associated regional fisheries.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.ecss.2014.05.018
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ispartof Estuarine, coastal and shelf science, 2014-06, Vol.147, p.32-41
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1096-0015
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source ScienceDirect Journals
subjects Algae
Animal and plant ecology
Animal, plant and microbial ecology
Biological and medical sciences
Brackish water ecosystems
Climatology. Bioclimatology. Climate change
Coastal
Drift
drifting algae
Earth, ocean, space
Exact sciences and technology
External geophysics
Extinction
Fish
Fisheries
Fundamental and applied biological sciences. Psychology
global warming
Meteorology
Sargassum
Springs
Summer
Synecology
Tosa Bay
title Drifting algae and fish: Implications of tropical Sargassum invasion due to ocean warming in western Japan
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