Abstract
Fishes and macroinvertebrates were collected using a 12.8m semi-balloon otter trawl with 4 cm mesh from January 5 to November 1, 2017 in the coastal waters of Alabama and Mississippi, as well as the Chandeleur Islands. Abundance and biomass of all fish and macroinvertebrates taken in the trawls were enumerated by species and weighed to the nearest 0.1g or kg, depending on size.
Purpose
Our purpose was to collect community-level data of the demersal fish and invertebrate species, looking for shifts in community composition due to remaining effects of oiling years after the oil spill.
DOI: doi:10.7266/N78W3BSF
Suggested Citation
John Valentine, Charlie Martin, J. Marcus Drymon, Trey Spearman, and Sean Powers. 2018. Trawl surveys of fish and invertebrates in Coastal Alabama, Mississippi, and the Chandeleur Islands, January 5 - November 1, 2017. Distributed by: Gulf of Mexico Research Initiative Information and Data Cooperative (GRIIDC), Harte Research Institute, Texas A&M University–Corpus Christi. doi:10.7266/N78W3BSF
Related Publication Citation
Martin, C. W., Lewis, K. A., McDonald, A. M., Spearman, T. P., Alford, S. B., Christian, R. C., & Valentine, J. F. (2020). Disturbance-driven changes to northern Gulf of Mexico nekton communities following the Deepwater Horizon oil spill. Marine Pollution Bulletin, 155, 111098. doi:10.1016/j.marpolbul.2020.111098
Funded by: Gulf of Mexico Research Initiative (GoMRI)
Funding cycle: RFP-IV
Research group: Alabama Center for Ecological Resilience (ACER)