Abstract

Fish and benthic invertebrates are important groups that inhabit shallow coastal areas. Many studies use these two groups separately to answer questions related to environmental relationships, but few assess the correlation between these two groups. This study aimed to assess correlation between richness and composition of fish and benthic invertebrate assemblages and to evaluate their responses to environmental variables in sandy beaches in a tropical coastal area in south-eastern Brazil. We tested for a correlation between fish and benthic invertebrates and evaluated which environmental variables influenced each group. Fish and invertebrate taxonomic richness were not correlated across sites. In addition, the two groups were not significantly correlated, even after controlling the effects of the environmental variables. The taxonomic richness of the two groups were influenced by different set of environmental drivers: fish were influenced mainly by the physicochemical variables, being positively correlated with salinity and dissolved oxygen, and negatively with temperature, whereas invertebrates richness were related mainly to granulometric variables, decreasing in fine and very fine sediment. Fish and invertebrate showed similar patterns with more influence of environmental variables than biotic variables that had comparatively more effects on the invertebrate than on the fish assemblage. Spatial segregation in species distribution along the beaches were found with the Gerreid fish predominating in semi-exposed beaches whereas the sparid Diplodus argenteus, the haemulid Orthopristis ruber and the clupeids Harengula clupeola and Sardinella brasiliensis predominated in the exposed beaches. The Polychaetae families Syllidae and Dorvilleidae, and isopod of the family Cirolanidae predominated in semi-protect beaches, whereas polychaetas of the families Glyceridae and Saccocirridae predominated in the exposed beaches. In this study, we showed that fish and benthic invertebrates are influenced by different environmental variables in tropical sandy beaches and no significant correlation was found between these two taxonomic groups. Our findings are a step to a better understanding of the fish-benthic invertebrate relationship and a contribution to management policies aiming the conservation of tropical coastal areas.

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