Abstract

The ichthyofauna of the neustal (0 to 10 cm) and immediate subsurface water (12 to 48 cm) of Galway Bay was sampled during the day from June 1983 to September 1984 and at night from May to September 1984. Species diversity (H) and the number of species per sample were significantly higher at night. The density of larvae at night was higher only during May. Thirty-nine of the more common species were grouped by factor analysis resulting in 13 species groups with distinct spatial and temporal distributions. Three main time periods, February to April, May to July and July to September and three spatially defined station categories, each of which had distinct species groups, were also isolated by factor analysis. Station categories were contiguous and hydrographically and topographically distinct. Eight species groups showed evidence of vertical migration. Five groups were most abundant from July to September compared with three during May to June and one to two at other times. Eighty-one species or other taxomonic entity (genus or family) were recorded. The majority were pseudoneustonic and represented by early larvae and post-larvae. Euneustonic species (Ciliata mustela, Ciliata septentrionalis, Crenimugil labrosus, Gaidropsaurus mediterraneus, Gasterosteus aculeatus, Liza sp., Rhinonemus cimbrius, Scophthalmus maximus) were all present as late post-larvae or juveniles and all except Ciliata spp occurred during autumn. Facultatively neustonic species (Ammodytes marinus, Belone belone, Ctenolabrus rupestris, Entelurus aequoreus, Nerophis lumbriciformis, Sprattus sprattus, Trachinus vipera) were, except for Belone belone and Ctenolabrus rupestris, all represented by juveniles. All except Ammodytes marinus and Sprattus sprattus were common only in autumn.

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