Abstract

Consumption, production, and respiration of fish communities utilizing two eelgrass beds in a shallow estuarine system near Beaufort, North Carolina have been estimated for 1971–1972: annual production was 21.7 kcal/m 2 in each bed with pinfish accounting for 45 and 68% of the production in the Phillips Island and Bogue Sound beds, respectively. Annual community respiration was 57.9 and 69.7 kcal/m 2 in the two beds with pinfish accounting for 62.6 and 26.7% of the total in the Bogue Sound and Phillips Island beds, respectively. Estimation of the annual food energy consumed by the eelgrass fish community using the Winberg and daily ration methods gave values within 6% of each other. Energy turnover was high (2.8), and the efficiency of energy dissipation low for the two eelgrass fish communities, suggesting that the resident fish populations were adapted to the temperature extremes within the bed. High ecological efficiencies of 0.24 and 0.23 and the high overall efficiency of the eelgrass system (production/solar radiation) of 0.0051 and 0.0086% indicate that the eelgrass beds are efficient systems for converting consumed energy and solar radiation into fish.

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