2010
DOI: 10.1007/s12237-010-9350-x
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Effects of a Persistent Red Tide (Karenia brevis) Bloom on Community Structure and Species-Specific Relative Abundance of Nekton in a Gulf of Mexico Estuary

Abstract: An unusually persistent red tide event caused by the ichthyotoxic dinoflagellate Karenia brevis occurred along the southwest Florida coast in 2005. Extensive fish kills led to concerns regarding the effect of red tide on fish populations and their subsequent recruitment. Community structure differences were analyzed for all small-and largebodied nekton species collected by fisheries-independent monitoring from 1996 through 2006. Indices of abundance of five economically important fish species were also calcula… Show more

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Cited by 58 publications
(51 citation statements)
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“…Although ichthyotoxic levels of K. brevis were continuously detected in Zones 2 and 3 throughout the summer, these levels never extended into Zone 1. Similarly, K. brevis data collected by the Environmental Protection Commission of Hillsborough Bay (EPC) during 2005 in Zone 1 and Hillsborough Bay did not contain bloom level concentrations of K. brevis (Flaherty & Landsberg 2011).…”
Section: Red Tide Datamentioning
confidence: 96%
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“…Although ichthyotoxic levels of K. brevis were continuously detected in Zones 2 and 3 throughout the summer, these levels never extended into Zone 1. Similarly, K. brevis data collected by the Environmental Protection Commission of Hillsborough Bay (EPC) during 2005 in Zone 1 and Hillsborough Bay did not contain bloom level concentrations of K. brevis (Flaherty & Landsberg 2011).…”
Section: Red Tide Datamentioning
confidence: 96%
“…data). Community shifts in small-and largebodied nekton, as well as declines in recruitment for 3 economically important fish species, including sand seatrout, were noted in Tampa Bay during and following the 2005 red tide (Flaherty & Landsberg 2011). The 2005 red tide was also responsible for radical shifts in the structure of the artificial reef epibenthic macroinvertebrate and fish communities located 19 to 25 km west of Tampa Bay, with fish species richness declining by > 50% and significant reductions in the abundances of most species (Dupont et al 2010).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 98%
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“…Accordingly, the conservation of a geographically diverse range of juvenile habitats has been identified as an important factor in the recovery of the endangered smalltooth sawfish Pristis pectinata in the USA by minimising the risk of stochastic local-scale disasters including hurricanes and fish kills (NMFS 2009). Indeed, toxic dinoflagellate algae blooms (red tides) have caused mass fish mortality within inshore embayments within P. pectinata's range (Flaherty & Landsberg 2011), and the population-level impacts of these events will be partially mitigated by production of juveniles in other less-affected areas. In the absence of such extreme events, portfolio effects across multiple areas may also stabilise the population-level production of juvenile P. pectinata.…”
Section: Implications For Management and Conservationmentioning
confidence: 99%