Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://hdl.handle.net/2440/12248
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Type: Journal article
Title: Have recent mass mortalities of the sardine Sardinops sagax facilitated an expansion in the distribution and abundance of the anchovy Engraulis australis in South Australia?
Author: Ward, T.
Hoedt, F.
McLeay, L.
Dimmlich, W.
Jackson, G.
Rogers, P.
Jones, K.
Citation: Marine Ecology: Progress Series, 2001; 220:241-251
Publisher: Inter-research
Issue Date: 2001
ISSN: 0171-8630
1616-1599
Statement of
Responsibility: 
T. M. Ward, F. Hoedt, L. McLeay, W. F. Dimmlich, G. Jackson, P. J. Rogers, K. Jones
Abstract: This paper examines the hypotheses (1) that Sardinops sagax and Engraulis australis are spatially segregated and do not interact directly, and (2) that recent mass mortalities of S. sagax have facilitated an expansion in the distribution and abundance of E. australis. In South Australian waters, S. sagax and E. australis both spawn during summer and autumn. Eggs and larvae of both species occur over the continental shelf, and are abundant in areas where upwelling occurs (e.g. off the Coffin Bay Peninsula and the western tip of Kangaroo Island) and frontal systems form (e.g. in Investigator Strait and the entrance of Spencer Gulf). After the mass- mortality events in 1995 and 1998, eggs and larvae of S. sagax were confined mainly to these areas, and estimates of the total abundance of S. sagax eggs and larvae in South Australian waters fell by between 48 and 83% respectively. Between 1996 and 1999, densities of E. australis eggs and larvae increased in both key spawning areas and the central and eastern Great Australian Bight, and total abundance of eggs and larvae increased by over 215 and 285% respectively. These results indicate that (1) S. sagax and E. australis are not spatially segregated and may interact directly, and (2) the mass mortalities of S. sagax may have facilitated an expansion in the distribution and abundance of E. australis. Hence, fluctuations in the relative abundance of S. sagax and Engraulis spp. observed in the world¹s productive boundary-current systems may also be possible in Australian waters.
Keywords: Sardine
Anchovy
Distribution and abundance
Eggs and larvae
depth
Temperature
Spawning Season
Spawning Area
Competition
Description: Copyright © 2001 Inter-Research
DOI: 10.3354/meps220241
Published version: http://dx.doi.org/10.3354/meps220241
Appears in Collections:Aurora harvest 2
Ecology, Evolution and Landscape Science publications

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