Revealing essential fish habitats in the western Taiwan coast based on data from trawl surveys
ID:96 View Protection:ATTENDEE Updated Time:2026-04-22 16:18:24 Hits:41 Oral Presentation

Start Time:Pending(Asia/Shanghai)

Duration:Pending

Session:No Session »

No files

Abstract
Habitat conservation can substantially enhance the resilience of coastal ecosystems to both anthropogenic pressure and global climate change. We analyzed the benthic fish data from trawl surveys collected twice a year over 11 coastal sites across western and southwestern Taiwan along a north-south axis from 2020 to 2023. This analysis allowed us to identify essential fish habitats with higher fish abundances and set management objectives and designate protected areas. We applied a generalized additive model to reveal the spatial patterns of environmental parameters, the univariate fish community index (e.g., species richness, diversity), and the abundance of the top 13 fish families. We applied a generalized linear latent variable model to isolate the effects of environmental parameters on the multivariate abundances of fish families. A total of 10,572 fish individuals from 266 species and 87 families were collected from a total of 115 hauls between 2020 to 2023. Significant north-south patterns were detected for the abundances of the 13 fish families, indicating that different coastal areas of western Taiwan serve as essential fish habitats. The varying north-south patterns among fish families suggest that different areas serve as essential fish habitats for different families. Different responses of fish family abundances to environmental parameters provide information for predicting how coastal development and future climate change might alter fish community composition. This information is crucial for developing effective conservation strategies. Our results can inform the development of ecological objectives and priorities for coastal development and conservation strategies. We recommend prioritizing the protection of croakers (Sciaenidae) as they may be particularly vulnerable to global warming and coastal development due to their preference for cold, shallow waters.
 
Keywords
Essential Fish Habitat,Coastal water,Fish,Climate Change,Trawl Survey
Speaker
Yu-Jia Lin
Associate Professor National Sun Yat-sen University;Graduate Institute of Marine Affairs

Submission Author
Yu-Jia Lin National Sun Yat-sen University;Graduate Institute of Marine Affairs
Submit Comment
Verify Code Change Another
All Comments
Important Date
  • Conference Date

    Jun 16

    2026

    to

    Jun 18

    2026

  • Apr 03 2026

    Draft paper submission deadline

Sponsored By
Hokkaido University
Organized By
Hokkaido University