The fish assemblages associated with asphalt volcanoes in the Santa Barbara Channel, California, USA

被引:0
作者
Love, Milton S. [1 ]
Nishimoto, Mary M. [1 ]
Meyer-Gutbrod, Erin [2 ]
Kui, Li [1 ]
Bull, Ann Scarborough [1 ]
Clarke, Elizabeth [3 ]
Fruh, Erica [4 ]
Miller, Robert J. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Calif Santa Barbara, Marine Sci Inst, Santa Barbara, CA 93106 USA
[2] Univ South Carolina, Sch Earth Ocean & Environm, Columbia, SC 29208 USA
[3] Northwest Fisheries Sci Ctr, 2725 Montlake Blvd East, Seattle, WA 98112 USA
[4] NOAA, Off Marine & Aviat Operat UxSOC, Newport, OR 97365 USA
基金
美国海洋和大气管理局; 美国国家航空航天局;
关键词
HABITAT ASSOCIATIONS; CONTINENTAL-SLOPE; CAMPECHE-KNOLLS; BASIN; OIL; PLATFORMS; ABUNDANCE; PATTERNS; DENSITY; CANYON;
D O I
10.5343/bms.2022.0026
中图分类号
Q17 [水生生物学];
学科分类号
071004 ;
摘要
volcanoes and other extensive hard tar seafloor accumulations are known from the Gulf of Mexico, off Angola, and in the Santa Barbara Channel (SBC), Southern California. There are two major volcano features in the SBC: Il Duomo (about 20 m high, cresting at a bottom depth of 115 m) and Il Duomito (about 15 m high, cresting at 185 m). While the geology of these features has been well studied, their fish assemblages have not been well documented. Using an autonomous underwater vehicle, we surveyed the fishes that live on the volcanoes and on the surrounding mud. We observed 1836 fishes, which represented a minimum of 43 species. Of these species, at least 23 (53.5%) were of rockfishes (genus Sebastes). Most of the species were entirely or primarily associated with a specific habitat type, either asphalt or mud. The most abundant primarily asphalt-associated species were greenblotched, swordspine, greenspotted, and flag rockfishes, and bocaccio, cowcod, and bank rockfish. The most abundant mud-associated species included Pacific sanddab, slender, Dover, and English soles, and unidentified poachers. A few taxa (shortspine combfish, greenstriped rockfish, and spotted ratfish) were found both on the mud and over the edges of the asphalt. We observed relatively low densities of all fishes on the volcanoes compared to densities on many Southern California natural reefs within the same depth range. We suggest that this is due to specialIntscript a lack of cobble fields around the volcanoes, creating limited habitat for either dwarf species or juvenile fishes, specialIntscript a lack of complex habitat (volcanoes are relatively smooth) creating very limited habitat for adults that need to shelter, and specialIntscript fishing pressure targeting economically important species. Given the unique nature of these tar volcanoes off California, we also suggest the state consider protecting this habitat and the organisms within it.
引用
收藏
页码:21 / 39
页数:20
相关论文
共 38 条
  • [1] Anderson TJ, 2007, FISH B-NOAA, V105, P168
  • [2] Origin, distribution, and alteration of asphalts at Chapopote Knoll, Southern Gulf of Mexico
    Bruening, Markus
    Sahling, Heiko
    MacDonald, Ian R.
    Ding, Feng
    Bohrmann, Gerhard
    [J]. MARINE AND PETROLEUM GEOLOGY, 2010, 27 (05) : 1093 - 1106
  • [3] The global extent of biodiversity offset implementation under no net loss policies
    Bull, Joseph William
    Strange, Niels
    [J]. NATURE SUSTAINABILITY, 2018, 1 (12): : 790 - 798
  • [4] Clarke ME, 2020, NOAA TECHNICAL MEMOR
  • [5] Set ambitious goals for biodiversity and sustainability
    Diaz, Sandra
    Zafra-Calvo, Noelia
    Purvis, Andy
    Verburg, Peter H.
    Obura, David
    Leadley, Paul
    Chaplin-Kramer, Rebecca
    De Meester, Luc
    Dulloo, Ehsan
    Martin-Lopez, Berta
    Rebecca Shaw, M.
    Visconti, Piero
    Broadgate, Wendy
    Bruford, Michael W.
    Burgess, Neil D.
    Cavender-Bares, Jeannine
    DeClerck, Fabrice
    Maria Fernandez-Palacios, Jose
    Garibaldi, Lucas A.
    Hill, Samantha L. L.
    Isbell, Forest
    Khoury, Colin K.
    Krug, Cornelia B.
    Liu, Jianguo
    Maron, Martine
    McGowan, Philip J. K.
    Pereira, Henrique M.
    Reyes-Garcia, Victoria
    Rocha, Juan
    Rondinini, Carlo
    Shannon, Lynne
    Shin, Yunne-Jai
    Snelgrove, Paul V. R.
    Spehn, Eva M.
    Strassburg, Bernardo
    Subramanian, Suneetha M.
    Tewksbury, Joshua J.
    Watson, James E. M.
    Zanne, Amy E.
    [J]. SCIENCE, 2020, 370 (6515) : 411 - 413
  • [6] Gräler B, 2016, R J, V8, P204
  • [7] Marine biodiversity offsets: Pragmatic approaches toward better conservation outcomes
    Jacob, Celine
    van Bochove, Jan-Willem
    Livingstone, Suzanne
    White, Thomas
    Pilgrim, John
    Bennun, Leon
    [J]. CONSERVATION LETTERS, 2020, 13 (03):
  • [8] Asphalt mounds and associated biota on the Angolan margin
    Jones, Daniel O. B.
    Walls, Anne
    Clare, Michael
    Fiske, Mike S.
    Weiland, Richard J.
    O'Brien, Robert
    Touzel, Daniel F.
    [J]. DEEP-SEA RESEARCH PART I-OCEANOGRAPHIC RESEARCH PAPERS, 2014, 94 : 124 - 136
  • [9] Tectonic geomorphology and hydrocarbon induced topography of the mid-Channel Anticline, Santa Barbara Basin, California
    Keller, E. A.
    Duffy, Marlene
    Kennett, J. P.
    Hill, T.
    [J]. GEOMORPHOLOGY, 2007, 89 (3-4) : 274 - 286
  • [10] The Unknown and the Unexplored: Insights Into the Pacific Deep-Sea Following NOAA CAPSTONE Expeditions
    Kennedy, Brian R. C.
    Cantwell, Kasey
    Malik, Mashkoor
    Kelley, Christopher
    Potter, Jeremy
    Elliott, Kelley
    Lobecker, Elizabeth
    Gray, Lindsay McKenna
    Sowers, Derek
    White, Michael P.
    France, Scott C.
    Auscavitch, Steven
    Mah, Christopher
    Moriwake, Virginia
    Bingo, Sarah R. D.
    Putts, Meagan
    Rotjan, Randi D.
    [J]. FRONTIERS IN MARINE SCIENCE, 2019, 6