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Long-Term Changes in Fish Assemblage Structure in the Yellow River Estuary Ecosystem, China

文献类型: 外文期刊

作者: Shan, Xiujuan 1 ; Sun, Pengfei 1 ; Jin, Xianshi 1 ; Li, Xiansen 3 ; Dai, Fangqun 3 ;

作者机构: 1.Chinese Acad Fishery Sci, Key Lab Sustainable Utilizat Marine Fisheries, Minist Agr, Yellow Sea Fisheries Res Inst, Qingdao 266071, Peoples R China

2.Shanghai Ocean Univ, Coll Marine Sci, Shanghai 201306, Peoples R China

3.Chinese Acad Fishery Sci, Key Lab Fishery Resources & Ecoenvironm, Yellow Sea Fisheries Res Inst, Qingdao 266071, Peoples R China

期刊名称:MARINE AND COASTAL FISHERIES ( 影响因子:1.568; 五年影响因子:1.938 )

ISSN: 1942-5120

年卷期: 2013 年 5 卷 1 期

页码:

收录情况: SCI

摘要: The Yellow River estuary ecosystem is an important spawning ground for many species found in the Bohai Sea and Yellow Sea and contributes substantially to the fishery resource structure and biological reproduction in the northern China Sea. Based on long-term ecosystem surveys in the Yellow River estuary during the main spawning period (May) of most fishery species from 1959 to 2011, the responses of the ecosystem, including regime shifts in species composition, biomass, diversity, and other related factors, were analyzed in this study. Since the 1980s, the dominant large-size species of high economic value (e.g., Largehead Hairtail Trichiurus lepturus) have been replaced by short-lived, low-trophic-level, planktivorous pelagic species (e.g., Scaly Hairfin Anchovy Setipinna taty and Japanese Anchovy Engraulis japonicus). Currently, traditional commercially targeted fishes, such as the Largehead Hairtail, Red Seabream Pagrus major, and Pacific Herring Clupea pallasii, are locally extinct. There has been a rapid shift of dominant species from highly valued, high-trophic-level, large-sized demersal species with complicated age structures to low-value, low-trophic-level, small-sized pelagic species with simple age structures; this shift has resulted in major changes to the ecological cycle and restoration of fishery resources. The fish catch declined from 421.66kg/h in 1959 to 0.25kg/h in 2008 and then increased to 3.62kg/h in 2011. Diversity and evenness indices showed a continuously increasing trend during 1959-2011. The Yellow River estuary may be significantly compromised by overfishing, climate change, dam construction, and pollution, resulting in the decline of traditional fishing industries and reduced biodiversity in this ecosystem.

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