Authors
Mateo Gres, Mathias Hüne, Simone Baldanzi, Alejandro Pérez-Matus, Mauricio F Landaeta
Publication date
2024/1/1
Journal
Regional Studies in Marine Science
Volume
69
Pages
103305
Publisher
Elsevier
Description
Shallow water seascapes are complex systems, important for the life history and connectivity of many marine fish species. Remote Underwater Video cameras (RUVs) are an increasingly used, non-lethal technique able to record the occurrence of reef fish species with little disturbance. In this study, RUVs were installed in a Marine Protected Area (Chañaral Island, northern Chile, 29°2'S, 71°34'W) at three different depth strata (5, 10, 15 m) in three different habitats (sand and boulder, bedrock, and kelp forest) during October 2018, July 2021 and October 2021. The RUV system recorded a total of 20 species belonging to 16 families over 73.5 h of videotaping. The most recurrent fishes were damselfish Chromis crusma, Chilean sandperch Pinguipes chilensis, and marblefish Aplodactylus punctatus. There was a significant difference in fish assemblage composition among depth strata and seasons, but not among …
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