Influence of Hydrology on Life-History Parameters of Common Freshwater Fishes from Southern Florida

Fact Sheet 139-02
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Abstract

Fishes are essential to the successful functioning of wetland food webs in southern Florida through their roles as prey and predators. Any changes that reduce the population sizes, community composition, or availability of aquatic animals will affect all facets of the ecology of these wetlands. In particular, small and medium-size fishes are important food items for most wading bird species. For this reason, fishes have been recognized by the multi-agency groups responsible for guiding the Everglades restoration process as a key indicator group by which to measure restoration success.

Despite the importance of fish for management, gaps in baseline knowledge remain. Basic demographic information, termed life-history parameters, is needed to make predictions about their resilience under alternative management scenarios. These parameters include growth rate, age at maturation, fecundity and life expectancy. However, basic life-history parameters remain to be characterized, even for abundant fish species. Adding to the challenge, life-history characteristics of important Everglades species are known to be plastic in response to environmental conditions and survivorship and recruitment schedules are certain to be influenced by variation in hydroperiod. We intend to study the effect of hydroperiod on recruitment, size/age structure, growth, and fecundity, which, in turn, determine fish population dynamics.

At present, data on fish reproduction, age and growth, and other life history characteristics are confined to a few species from a limited area of long-hydroperiod marsh in central Shark River Slough. As we continue the analysis and synthesis of data from the long-term fish collections, life-history information will help explain patterns of fluctuations in the time series. Accurate life-history data are also very important in building credible simulation models like ATLSS. Without empirical life-history data from a range of environments, the model will be simplistic and inadequate.

Suggested Citation

Loftus, W.F., 2002, Influence of Hydrology on Life-History Parameters of Common Freshwater Fishes from Southern Florida: U.S. Geological Survey Fact Sheet 2002–139, https://doi.org/10.3133/fs13902.

ISSN: 2327-6932 (online)

Study Area

Table of Contents

  • Study Design
  • Applications
Publication type Report
Publication Subtype USGS Numbered Series
Title Influence of hydrology on life-history parameters of common freshwater fishes from southern Florida
Series title Fact Sheet
Series number 139-02
DOI 10.3133/fs13902
Publication Date October 01, 2002
Year Published 2002
Language English
Publisher U.S. Geological Survey
Publisher location Reston, VA
Contributing office(s) Caribbean-Florida Water Science Center
Description HTML Document
Country United States
State Florida
Additional publication details