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Tropical cyclone impacts on seagrass-associated fishes in a temperate-subtropical estuary

Major storms can alter coastal ecosystems in several direct and indirect ways including habitat destruction, stormwater-related water quality degradation, and organism mortality. From 2010–2020, ten tropical cyclones impacted coastal North Carolina, providing an opportunity to explore ecosystem resp...

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Autores principales: Zhang, Y. Stacy, Swinea, Savannah H., Roskar, Grace, Trackenberg, Stacy N., Gittman, Rachel K., Jarvis, Jessie C., Kenworthy, W. Judson, Yeager, Lauren A., Fodrie, F. Joel
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9560482/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36227958
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0273556
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author Zhang, Y. Stacy
Swinea, Savannah H.
Roskar, Grace
Trackenberg, Stacy N.
Gittman, Rachel K.
Jarvis, Jessie C.
Kenworthy, W. Judson
Yeager, Lauren A.
Fodrie, F. Joel
author_facet Zhang, Y. Stacy
Swinea, Savannah H.
Roskar, Grace
Trackenberg, Stacy N.
Gittman, Rachel K.
Jarvis, Jessie C.
Kenworthy, W. Judson
Yeager, Lauren A.
Fodrie, F. Joel
author_sort Zhang, Y. Stacy
collection PubMed
description Major storms can alter coastal ecosystems in several direct and indirect ways including habitat destruction, stormwater-related water quality degradation, and organism mortality. From 2010–2020, ten tropical cyclones impacted coastal North Carolina, providing an opportunity to explore ecosystem responses across multiple storms. Using monthly trawl and contemporaneous seagrass surveys conducted in Back Sound, NC, we evaluated how cyclones may affect the nursery role of shallow-water biogenic habitats by examining seagrass-associated fish responses within a temperate-subtropical estuary. We employed a general before-after-control-impact approach using trawls conducted prior (before) and subsequent (after) to storm arrival and years either without (control) or with (impact) storms. We examined whether effects were apparent over short (within ~three weeks of impact) and seasonal (May-October) timescales, as well as if the magnitude of storm-related shifts varied as a function of storm intensity. Our findings suggest that the ability of these shallow-water habitats to support juvenile fishes was not dramatically altered by hurricanes. The resilience exhibited by fishes was likely underpinned by the relative persistence of the seagrass habitat, which appeared principally undamaged by storms based upon review of available–albeit limited seagrass surveys. Increasing cyclone intensity, however, was correlated with greater declines in catch and may potentially underlie the emigration and return rate of fish after cyclones. Whether estuarine fishes will continue to be resilient to acute storm impacts despite chronic environmental degradation and predicted increases major tropical cyclone frequency and intensity remains a pressing question.
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spelling pubmed-95604822022-10-14 Tropical cyclone impacts on seagrass-associated fishes in a temperate-subtropical estuary Zhang, Y. Stacy Swinea, Savannah H. Roskar, Grace Trackenberg, Stacy N. Gittman, Rachel K. Jarvis, Jessie C. Kenworthy, W. Judson Yeager, Lauren A. Fodrie, F. Joel PLoS One Research Article Major storms can alter coastal ecosystems in several direct and indirect ways including habitat destruction, stormwater-related water quality degradation, and organism mortality. From 2010–2020, ten tropical cyclones impacted coastal North Carolina, providing an opportunity to explore ecosystem responses across multiple storms. Using monthly trawl and contemporaneous seagrass surveys conducted in Back Sound, NC, we evaluated how cyclones may affect the nursery role of shallow-water biogenic habitats by examining seagrass-associated fish responses within a temperate-subtropical estuary. We employed a general before-after-control-impact approach using trawls conducted prior (before) and subsequent (after) to storm arrival and years either without (control) or with (impact) storms. We examined whether effects were apparent over short (within ~three weeks of impact) and seasonal (May-October) timescales, as well as if the magnitude of storm-related shifts varied as a function of storm intensity. Our findings suggest that the ability of these shallow-water habitats to support juvenile fishes was not dramatically altered by hurricanes. The resilience exhibited by fishes was likely underpinned by the relative persistence of the seagrass habitat, which appeared principally undamaged by storms based upon review of available–albeit limited seagrass surveys. Increasing cyclone intensity, however, was correlated with greater declines in catch and may potentially underlie the emigration and return rate of fish after cyclones. Whether estuarine fishes will continue to be resilient to acute storm impacts despite chronic environmental degradation and predicted increases major tropical cyclone frequency and intensity remains a pressing question. Public Library of Science 2022-10-13 /pmc/articles/PMC9560482/ /pubmed/36227958 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0273556 Text en © 2022 Zhang et al https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Zhang, Y. Stacy
Swinea, Savannah H.
Roskar, Grace
Trackenberg, Stacy N.
Gittman, Rachel K.
Jarvis, Jessie C.
Kenworthy, W. Judson
Yeager, Lauren A.
Fodrie, F. Joel
Tropical cyclone impacts on seagrass-associated fishes in a temperate-subtropical estuary
title Tropical cyclone impacts on seagrass-associated fishes in a temperate-subtropical estuary
title_full Tropical cyclone impacts on seagrass-associated fishes in a temperate-subtropical estuary
title_fullStr Tropical cyclone impacts on seagrass-associated fishes in a temperate-subtropical estuary
title_full_unstemmed Tropical cyclone impacts on seagrass-associated fishes in a temperate-subtropical estuary
title_short Tropical cyclone impacts on seagrass-associated fishes in a temperate-subtropical estuary
title_sort tropical cyclone impacts on seagrass-associated fishes in a temperate-subtropical estuary
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9560482/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36227958
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0273556
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