Vol. 38 No. 4, 1999
Species Composition of Fish in the Coastal Zones of the Tsengwen Estuary, with Descriptions of Five New Records from Taiwan
Shih-Rong Kuo1 and Kwang-Tsao Shao2,*
1Department of Aquaculture, National Chiayi Institute of Technology, Chiayi, Taiwan 600
2Institute of Zoology, Academia Sinica, Taipei, Taiwan 115
Shih-Rong Kuo and Kwang-Tsao Shao (1999)
Fishes in the estuary of the Tsengwen River and nearby coastal zone
were collected using different gear between October 1994 and July 1997.
A checklist of all fish species is given in the present paper together
with their lifecycle category, life habits, and world zoogeographical
distribution. Totally 80 families and 244 species of inshore fishes
were recorded from 5 estuarine zones along the coast near the Tsengwen
River mouth. Among these families, Gobiidae had the most species (34
species, 13.9%); Carangidae the 2nd (15 species, 6.1%); and then
Apogonidae and Clupeidae (11 species, 4.5%). Nearly half of these
species, including 10 families and 111 species, were not previously
recorded from the entire western coast of Taiwan, and include 5 new
records for Taiwan. They are Ambassis miops, A. interruptus, and A. commersoni of the Ambassidae; Epinephelus lanceolatus
of the Serranidae; and Zenarchopterus dunkeri of the Hemiramphidae.
Diagnostic characters and specimen photographs of these 5 species are
provided. The fishes collected throughout the estuarine areas comprised
208 marine species, of which 124 were marine stragglers and 84 were
marine estuarine-opportunists, together with 29 estuarine species, 6
freshwater species, and 1 catadromous species. Comparison of the
faunistic similarities and the dendrogram among the 5 estuarine zones
near Tsengwen, the estuarine zones of Tainan (Yenshui and Erhjen), of
the Kaoping River in southern Taiwan, and the Tanshui River in northern
Taiwan indicate that the species composition of the 5 Tsengwen
estuarine zones are in 1 cluster, and they group with the southern
estuaries of both Tainan and Kaoshiung rather than with the northern
fish fauna at Tanshui. This result is consistent with previous studies
on coral reef and mangrove fishes whose results indicate that community
structures between northern and southern Taiwan are quite different.
Key words: Fish fauna, Species composition, Life cycle, Checklist, Tsengwen River estuary.
*Correspondence: Tel: 886-2-27899545. Fax: 886-2-27883463. E-mail: zoskt@gate.sinica.edu.tw
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