MacMillan-Kenny Zachary, Denniston Mary, Edinger Evan, Templeton Adam, Côté David, Limoges Audrey, Robert Katleen
Department of Geography, Memorial University of Newfoundland and Labrador, St. John's, NL Canada.
Fisheries and Marine Institute, Memorial University of Newfoundland and Labrador, St. John's, NL Canada.
Polar Biol. 2025;48(1):20. doi: 10.1007/s00300-024-03323-z. Epub 2025 Jan 2.
iKaluk, Inuttitut for Arctic charr (), holds significant commercial and cultural value for Inuit communities throughout Nunatsiavut. Studies evaluating iKaluk habitat associations in freshwater are plentiful; however, there is limited information on the ecological makeup and sediment characteristics of anadromous charr habitats in marine environments. This study investigated the benthic associations of Arctic charr during their marine residency period in Nain, Nunatsiavut, using underwater videos, harvester-identified fishing locations, and acoustic telemetry. Drop-camera surveys were deployed on previously placed hydrophone acoustic receivers and within harvester-identified fishing locations to describe and quantify available benthic habitats in the study area. Telemetry information was used to identify charr occupancy hotspots, and calculate habitat suitability indices. A total of 248,056 benthic organisms belonging to 63 morphotaxa were identified within the 125 video drops used for benthic community characterization and these represented five faunal assemblages. Marine phase charr occupied estuaries to a greater degree than other fjord or coastal headland environments and these habitats were typically characterized by fine sediments covered by high densities of brittle stars (Ophiuroidea spp.) and benthic diatom mats. The consistent presence of diatomaceous sediments is indicative of abundant foraging opportunities. The importance of these habitats to iKaluk, need to be considered in future marine planning given the cultural and ecological value of this species to many northern communities that face growing threats from environmental change.
The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s00300-024-03323-z.
“ikaluk”,因纽特语中北极红点鲑的名称,对整个努纳茨亚武特地区的因纽特社区具有重要的商业和文化价值。评估红点鲑在淡水中栖息地关联的研究很多;然而,关于溯河洄游红点鲑在海洋环境中的生态构成和沉积物特征的信息有限。本研究利用水下视频、渔民确定的捕鱼地点和声遥测技术,调查了努纳茨亚武特地区奈恩的北极红点鲑在海洋栖息期间的底栖生物关联。将落底式摄像机调查部署在先前放置的水听器声学接收器上以及渔民确定 的捕鱼地点内,以描述和量化研究区域内可用的底栖栖息地。遥测信息用于确定红点鲑的栖息热点,并计算栖息地适宜性指数。在用于底栖生物群落特征描述的125次视频投放中,共识别出属于63个形态分类单元的248,056个底栖生物,这些生物代表了五个动物群落组合。海洋阶段的红点鲑比其他峡湾或沿海岬角环境更频繁地占据河口,这些栖息地的典型特征是细沉积物上覆盖着高密度的蛇尾(蛇尾纲物种)和底栖硅藻垫。硅藻质沉积物的持续存在表明有丰富的觅食机会。鉴于该物种对许多面临环境变化日益增长威胁的北方社区具有文化和生态价值,在未来的海洋规划中需要考虑这些栖息地对“ikaluk”的重要性。
在线版本包含可在10.1007/s00300-024-03323-z获取的补充材料。