Fish Productivity and Trophic Transfer in Created and Naturally Occurring Salt Marsh Habitat
High marsh pools are natural features in New England salt marshes that provide important subtidal refuge for the dominant resident fish, Fundulus heteroclitus (mummichog). F. heteroclitus is considered an important component in the trophic transfer pathway for its omnivorous diet and role as a prey...
Main Authors: | Dionne, Michele (Author), Burdick, David M. (Author), Hobbie, Erik A. (Author), Vincent, Robert (Contributor) |
---|---|
Other Authors: | Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Sea Grant College Program (Contributor) |
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Springer US,
2016-07-29T17:27:50Z.
|
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | Get fulltext |
Similar Items
-
Rethinking the Freshwater Eel: Salt Marsh Trophic Support of the American Eel, Anguilla rostrata
by: Dionne, Michele, et al.
Published: (2017) -
Habitat use, secondary production, and trophic export by salt marsh nekton in shallow waters
by: Cicchetti, Giancarlo
Published: (1998) -
Ecosystem Gas Exchange in Natural and Created Tidal Salt Marshes of Tidewater, Virginia
by: Roggero, Molly Mitchell
Published: (2003) -
Aspects of the ecology of fishes associated with salt marshes and adjacent habitats in a temperate South African estuary
by: Paterson, Angus William
Published: (1999) -
Effects of natural and anthropogenic change on habitat use and movement of endangered salt marsh harvest mice.
by: Katherine R Smith, et al.
Published: (2014-01-01)