Abstract

The surf-zones of sandy beaches near Perth, Western Australia often harbour huge accumulations of detached macrophyte detritus. During 2.5 yr sampling, 29 species of fishes were captured over two sandy beaches in this region and the fish community was dominated by juveniles. There was a highly significant positive relationship between the number of fishes and the quantity of detached macrophytes taken in each surf-zone netting. Comparisons of total fish abundance on beaches with and without surf-zone accumulations of detached plants, showed that fishes were two to 10 times more abundant on the beach with weed accumulations, depending on the time of day, and date of sampling. However, despite the overall lower abundance of fishes on the open sandy beach, there was a significant increase in the number of fishes captured over the sandy beach at night. There were also two to five times the number of species over the beach with weed during the day, as opposed to equal numbers of species at night. Seven fish species made up >95% of the total catch and these species fell into two groups with regard to diurnal distribution patterns; those that were equally abundant in weed dominated or open surf-zones, and those that were weed-associated. Analyses of the diets of these fishes and the daytime distribution of an important avian piscivore in the surf-zone suggested that the large quantities of weed in the surf-zone of sandy beaches in this region provide both a rich feeding site for fishes, as well as a refuge from diurnal predators. At night, when visual feeding predators are absent, some fish species move to open sandy areas to feed. Because the majority of fishes in this surf-zone community feed on weed-associated prey, and the input of macrophyte detritus is the major source of primary production in the surf-zone, we argue that the food chain dynamics in the surf-zone in this region are fundamentally different to those of sandy beaches that have been studied previously.

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