Autor: |
Plumlee, Jeffrey D.1 (AUTHOR) jplumlee@live.unc.edu, Kenworthy, Matthew D.2 (AUTHOR), Gittman, Rachel K.3 (AUTHOR), Keller, Danielle A.4 (AUTHOR), Garnett, Emma E.5 (AUTHOR), Vaca‐Pita, Leandro6 (AUTHOR), Carr, Lindsey A.7 (AUTHOR), Fodrie, F. Joel1 (AUTHOR) |
Předmět: |
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Zdroj: |
Ecology. Feb2022, Vol. 103 Issue 2, p1-4. 4p. |
Abstrakt: |
Dog snapper residency within mangrove creeks despite potential energetic demands of salinity variability may also reinforce the overall fitness benefits for juvenile fishes provided by coastal biogenic habitats (Lefcheck et al. 2019). Keywords: abiotic stress; Galápagos; osmoregulation; Pacific dog snapper; passive acoustic telemetry; salinity EN abiotic stress Galápagos osmoregulation Pacific dog snapper passive acoustic telemetry salinity 1 4 4 02/03/22 20220201 NES 220201 Abiotic environmental stress is a fundamental driver of population and community dynamics across diverse ecosystems (Menge and Sutherland 1987). It is implausible that dog snapper refuged in pockets of high-salinity water during low tides or low-salinity water during high tides, as we routinely observed snappers swimming through areas of visible mixing of saltwater and freshwater. As suspected, extreme salinity changes in these creeks cycled twice a day ranging between <10 to 35+ PSU in the eastern creek, and <2 to 35+ PSU in the western creek (Fig. [Extracted from the article] |
Databáze: |
GreenFILE |
Externí odkaz: |
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