Abstract

Estuaries have long been recognized as nursery habitats for various marine fish species. As seascapes consisting of a mosaic of habitat patches, estuarine nurseries incorporate ecological processes such as ontogenetic shifts. To improve our understanding of the habitat requirement changes of nursery species within the estuarine seascape, habitat suitability models were built using boosted regression trees for three size classes of European flounder (Platichthys flesus) juveniles. The models combined several dynamic and static predictors, from physical and chemical water parameters to biological and physical habitat variables. The relationships between juveniles and predictor variables varied with size, potentially indicating the dynamics of habitat use for the juvenile flounder inside the estuarine nursery. Younger post-settled juveniles tended to be spatially constrained to a shallow upstream area and, with size, there were ontogenetic shifts to the middle estuary. This demonstrates the importance of considering different life stages when developing essential fish habitat maps, which reflect fine scale temporal and spatial distributions. Given the high level of anthropogenic pressures to which estuaries are subjected, the consideration of fish ontogenetic habitat requirements within the estuarine nursery is needed to identify high-value areas, and is valuable for developing effective spatial and temporal management plans. These are essential to fully protect the most sensitive life stages, such as early post-settlement stages occupying transient habitats. Additionally, and as the juvenile-habitat associations can rapidly change, fine-scale connectivity in the estuarine nursery becomes even more relevant in determining recruitment. Connectivity should therefore be central in conservation planning, in order to sustain estuarine and marine adult populations, and ultimately maintaining the fisheries.

Full Text
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