IR Home
MEPS
Home
Editors
Forthcoming
Information
Subscribe
Journals
Home
MEPS
AME
CR
DAO
ESEP
Search
Subscribe
Book Series
EE Books
Top Books
ESEP Books
Order
EEIU Brochures
(pdf format)
Discussion Forums
Home
Research
Endangered Species Programs
Institutions
International Ecology Institute
Eco-Ethics International Union
Foundation
Otto Kinne Foundation
 |  |
MEPS 224:45-54 (2001)
|
Abstract
|

Plankton studies in Buzzards Bay, Massachusetts, USA. V. Ichthyoplankton, 1987 to 1993
Antonie S. Chute1, Jefferson T. Turner2,*
1National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, National Marine Fisheries Service, Northeast Fisheries Science Center, 166 Water Street, Woods Hole, Massachusetts 02543, USA
2Biology Department, University of Massachusetts Dartmouth, 285 Old Westport Road, North Dartmouth, Massachusetts 02747, USA
*Corresponding author. E-mail: jturner@umassd.edu

ABSTRACT: Monthly sampling for ichthyoplankton was conducted at 8 stations in Buzzards Bay, Massachusetts, from October 1987 to September 1993 using a 48 cm diameter plankton net with 0.102 mm mesh. From October 1992 to September 1993, an additional 75 cm
diameter net with 0.202 mm mesh was also towed to compare mesh selectivity. Stations included two with heavy anthropogenic impact, the urbanized inner harbor of New Bedford, Massachusetts, and over New Bedford's offshore sewage outfall, as well as other
nearshore shallow and offshore deep stations in comparatively pristine areas of the bay. Fish larvae from 32 genera were identified. Fish eggs were counted but not identified. There was a pronounced summer peak in larval abundance dominated by cunner
Tautogolabrus adspersus, anchovy Anchoa sp. and tautog Tautoga onitis. A smaller winter/ early spring peak was dominated by sand lance Ammodytes sp. This pattern was evident for all 6 years of the study. The assemblage of fish
larvae found in Buzzards Bay differed from that in Cape Cod Bay, lending support to the concept of Cape Cod as a faunal boundary. The 2 differently sized nets used during the last year of the study did not catch significantly different numbers of fish
larvae per m3, but length frequency distributions of 4 abundant species of larvae revealed that the smaller mesh net caught significantly smaller Anchoa sp. The larger mesh net collected significantly more species of fish larvae. A
comparison of annual mean catches of 4 species did not reveal significant changes in abundance over 6 yr.
KEY WORDS: Ichthyoplankton · Composition · Abundance · Buzzards Bay
Full text in pdf format

Published in MEPS Vol.
224
(2001) on December 18
Print ISSN: 0171-8630; Online ISSN: 1616-1599.
Copyright © Inter-Research, Oldendorf/Luhe, 2001
|