Abstract

The fish community in coastal waters of the Buenos Aires Province is dominated by seven sciaenid species: Micropogonias furnieri, Cynoscion guatucupa, Macrodon ancylodon, Pogonias cromis, Umbrina canosai, Paralonchurus brasiliensis, and Menticirrhus americanus. The relation between sciaenid spawning females and environmental factors was examined in order to describe the spawning strategy of these species in Argentine coastal waters. Sciaenid species were classified into three groups according to the thermohaline range of the spawning areas: (a) estuarine spawners associated with the bottom salinity front comprised those species that spawned in the inner area of the estuary in accordance with the main horizontal salinity gradients at the bottom (M. furnieri, M. ancylodon, and P. chromis); (b) estuarine spawners not associated with the bottom salinity front comprised those species that spawned mainly in the middle of the estuary, in brackish water with salinities ranging from 24 to 30 (P. brasiliensis and M. americanus); and (c) marine spawners comprised those species that always spawned in salt water (salinity values higher than 30) in the outer area of the Río de la Plata Estuary or El Rincón, in the southern part of Buenos Aires Province (C. guatucupa, U. canosai, and M. furnieri). Micropogonias furnieri, the most abundant sciaenid in Argentina that presents the highest latitudinal distribution, can behave as a marine or estuarine spawner depending on the environmental characteristics. This allows it to make better use of each ecosystem and thus increase its survival chances.

Highlights

  • In the Argentine Sea, in particular the Buenos Aires Coastal Zone, the confluence of continental and shelf waters generates two frontal zones known as the Río de la Plata Estuary (34o S–36o S) and El Rincón (39o S–41o S) (Guerrero et al 1997, Guerrero 1998)

  • The fish community in coastal waters of the Buenos Aires Province is dominated by seven sciaenid species: Micropogonias furnieri, Cynoscion guatucupa, Macrodon ancylodon, Pogonias cromis, Umbrina canosai, Paralonchurus brasiliensis, and Menticirrhus americanus

  • The family Sciaenidae is represented by seven species: whitemouth croaker (Micropogonias furnieri), stripped weakfish (Cynoscion guatucupa), king weakfish (Macrodon ancylodon), black drum (Pogonias cromis), Argentine croaker (Umbrina canosai), banded croaker (Paralonchurus brasiliensis), and southern kingfish (Menticirrhus americanus)

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Summary

Introduction

In the Argentine Sea, in particular the Buenos Aires Coastal Zone, the confluence of continental and shelf waters generates two frontal zones known as the Río de la Plata Estuary (34o S–36o S) and El Rincón (39o S–41o S) (Guerrero et al 1997, Guerrero 1998). There are three major classes of physical processes that combine to yield favorable reproductive habitats for coastal pelagic fishes: (1) enrichment processes (upwelling, mixing, etc.), (2) concentration processes (convergence, frontal formation, water column stability), and (3) processes favoring retention within (or drift toward) the appropriate habitat (Bakun 1996). For this reason, front areas are considered to be favorable reproductive habitats (Le Fèvre 1986, Largier 1993, Agostini and Bakun 2002). The family Sciaenidae is represented by seven species: whitemouth croaker (Micropogonias furnieri), stripped weakfish (Cynoscion guatucupa), king weakfish (Macrodon ancylodon), black drum (Pogonias cromis), Argentine croaker (Umbrina canosai), banded croaker (Paralonchurus brasiliensis), and southern kingfish (Menticirrhus americanus)

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