Abstract

ABSTRACTAn analysis was conducted of the community structure variability of demersal fish larvae and its relationship with environmental forcing on the west coast of the Baja California Peninsula (25–31°N). The information comes from two data sets of oceanographic cruises in 1997–2000 and 2006–2010. From a total of 190 identified taxa, a high number of species (71) was shared throughout the peninsula. The spatiotemporal contrast in the community structure suggests the separation of two groups (northern and southern) whose boundary is located around Punta Eugenia. The northern group showed an alternate dominance of species with a subarctic-transitional faunistic affinity during the winter and spring and species of a subtropical affinity during summer–autumn. In contrast, the dominant taxa in the southern group have a tropical–subtropical affinity throughout the year, although some taxa of subarctic-transitional affinity also occur during winter–spring. In the spatiotemporal scale, these results suggest that the major cause that modulates the extension and structure of the assemblages is the seasonal oceanic dynamics. Moreover, the intensity of warming or cooling events (El Niño and La Niña) influences the structure of the community on an interannual scale by displacing the zonal boundaries of the groups’ distribution.

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