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Long-term shifts in abundance and distribution of a temperate fish fauna: a response to climate change and fishing practices
Long-term shifts in abundance and distribution of a temperate fish fauna: a response to climate change and fishing practices
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Long-term shifts in abundance and distribution of a temperate fish fauna: a response to climate change and fishing practices
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Long-term shifts in abundance and distribution of a temperate fish fauna: a response to climate change and fishing practices
Long-term shifts in abundance and distribution of a temperate fish fauna: a response to climate change and fishing practices

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Long-term shifts in abundance and distribution of a temperate fish fauna: a response to climate change and fishing practices
Long-term shifts in abundance and distribution of a temperate fish fauna: a response to climate change and fishing practices
Journal Article

Long-term shifts in abundance and distribution of a temperate fish fauna: a response to climate change and fishing practices

2011
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Overview
Aim: South-eastern Australia is a climate change hotspot with well-documented recent changes in its physical marine environment. The impact on and temporal responses of the biota to change are less well understood, but appear to be due to influences of climate, as well as the non-climate related past and continuing human impacts. We attempt to resolve the agents of change by examining major temporal and distributional shifts in the fish fauna and making a tentative attribution of causal factors. Location: Temperate seas of south-eastern Australia. Methods: Mixed data sources synthesized from published accounts, scientific surveys, spearfishing and angling competitions, commercial catches and underwater photographic records, from the 'late 1800s' to the ' present', were examined to determine shifts in coastal fish distributions. Results: Forty-five species, representing 27 families (about 30% of the inshore fish families occurring in the region), exhibited major distributional shifts thought to be climate related. These are distributed across the following categories: species previously rare or unlisted (12), with expanded ranges (23) and/or abundance increases (30), expanded populations in south-eastern Tasmania (16) and extralimital vagrants (4). Another 9 species, representing 7 families, experienced longerterm changes (since the 1800s) probably due to anthropogenic factors, such as habitat alteration and fishing pressure: species now extinct locally (3), recovering (3), threatened (2) or with remnant populations (1). One species is a temporary resident periodically recruited from New Zealand. Of fishes exhibiting an obvious poleward movement, most are reef dwellers from three Australian biogeographic categories: widespread southern, western warm temperate (Flindersian) or eastern warm temperate (Peronian) species. Main conclusions: Some of the region's largest predatory reef fishes have become extinct in Tasmanian seas since the ' late 1800s', most likely as a result of poor fishing practices. In more recent times, there have been major changes in the distribution patterns of Tasmanian fishes that correspond to dramatic warming observed in the local marine environment.