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Effect of water quality variation on fish assemblages in an anthropogenically impacted tropical estuary, Colombian Pacific

Environmental Science and Pollution Research 2020 66 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 40 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Guillermo Duque, Andrés Molina, Andrés Molina, Andrés Molina, Andrés Molina, Andrés Molina, Diego Esteban Gamboa-García, Andrés Molina, Guillermo Duque, Guillermo Duque, Diego Esteban Gamboa-García, Andrés Molina, Guillermo Duque, Guillermo Duque, Andrés Molina, Guillermo Duque, Guillermo Duque, Guillermo Duque, Guillermo Duque, Pilar Cogua Pilar Cogua Guillermo Duque, Guillermo Duque, Guillermo Duque, Pilar Cogua

Summary

Researchers found that fish diversity in Buenaventura Bay, a polluted tropical estuary in Colombia, was strongly shaped by water quality — species that tolerate low oxygen and high nitrite dominated, while overall species richness dropped as nutrients from human activity increased. This shows how pollution from urban and agricultural runoff can fundamentally restructure the fish communities that local fisheries depend on.

In tropical estuaries, fish diversity varies spatially and temporally due to behavioral processes such as reproductive migrations, predator avoidance, and foraging, which are affected by water quality. Eutrophication is one of the main factors affecting water quality in estuaries. The objective of this study was to determine variation in fish assemblage explained by fluctuating water quality in the Buenaventura Bay. Fish were captured using artisanal trawl nets during the wet, dry, and transitional seasons at four sampling sites. Additionally, alkalinity; phosphate, nitrite, and nitrate concentrations; dissolved oxygen; pH; temperature; and suspended solids were measured. Multivariate analysis was used to assess the effect of water quality on fish assemblage. In Buenaventura Bay, the assemblage composition of Pseudupeneus grandisquamis, Daector dowi, and Citharichthys gilberti was affected by nitrate concentration. Moreover, large fish biomasses were associated with high nitrite concentration, intermediate salinity, and low dissolved oxygen, suggesting that these estuaries are dominated by species tolerant to poor water quality. Species richness was associated with low nitrate and phosphate concentrations, more suitable water quality indicators, and intermediate temperatures. These results suggest that the deteriorating water quality of estuaries as a result of the anthropogenic impact could increase dominance and decrease richness, resulting in structural changes of fish assemblages.

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