2016
DOI: 10.1007/s13157-016-0783-2
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Comparative Assessment of Mangrove Biomass and Fish Assemblages in an Urban and Rural Mangrove Wetlands in Ghana

Abstract: Mangrove wetlands are one of the most important ecosystems on earth, providing habitats for both marine and terrestrial organisms as well as supporting essential human services. However, high dependence of humans on these systems is leading to significant transformation of mangrove wetlands and reduction in their ecosystem services including fisheries. The objectives of this study were to estimate the biomass of two mangrove wetlands in Ghana within urban and rural contexts and determine the fish fauna assembl… Show more

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Cited by 20 publications
(15 citation statements)
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“…Furthermore, a subset of fish richness, that of the subsistence fisheries species, was strongly and positively related to the extent of mangrove coverage within 20 km. This contrasts with the findings of Nortey et al (), but further highlights the importance of conserving and expanding urban mangroves, which may be supporting an important subsidy to the food supply of urban and surrounding populations. Highly valuable commercial species, however, were not found to be lacking in urban sites as was reported in Tampa Bay, USA (Krebs, McIvor et al, ).…”
Section: Discussioncontrasting
confidence: 96%
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“…Furthermore, a subset of fish richness, that of the subsistence fisheries species, was strongly and positively related to the extent of mangrove coverage within 20 km. This contrasts with the findings of Nortey et al (), but further highlights the importance of conserving and expanding urban mangroves, which may be supporting an important subsidy to the food supply of urban and surrounding populations. Highly valuable commercial species, however, were not found to be lacking in urban sites as was reported in Tampa Bay, USA (Krebs, McIvor et al, ).…”
Section: Discussioncontrasting
confidence: 96%
“…Yet one study in Australia noted an overall lack of mangrove bird species in Darwin (Noske, 1996), and another study in Brazil noted differences in the abundances of certain specialists species (Mestre, Krul, & Moraes, 2007). Similar differences in urban mangrove fish communities have also been noted, suggesting that abundance, species richness and morphology are all influenced by surrounding urban land use (Clynick & Chapman, 2002;Nortey et al, 2016;Peters, Yeager, & Layman, 2015;Viana, Lucena Fr edou, Fr edou, Torres, & Bordalo, 2010). These findings point to potential synanthropic and misanthropic tendencies of certain taxa, which may be driven by trophic level and feeding behaviour.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 92%
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“…Globally, mangrove coverage in the largest cities is decreasing faster than overall rates from corresponding countries (B. L. Branoff, 2017). In some cases, this loss results in fragmented forests consisting of novel species assemblages and size classes (Benfield, Guzman, & Mair, 2005;Mohamed, Neukermans, Kairo, Dahdouh-Guebas, & Koedam, 2009;Nortey, Aheto, Blay, Jonah, & Asare, 2016;Zamprogno et al, 2016). There are cases of expanding urban mangrove coverage (DasGupta & Shaw, 2013;Pham & Yoshino, 2016), although the young forests may contain less biomass (Friess, Richards, & Phang, 2015).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Mangroves are important coastal habitats for several ecological, economical, and protective functions (Biswas et al 2009;Cavanaugh et al 2014;Nortey et al 2016) and act as barriers against storm surges, floods and tsunamis (Alongi 2008;Kulkarni 2009;Teh et al 2009;Yanagisawa et al 2009;McFadden et al 2016). They have a highly efficient nutrient retention mechanism (Alongi 2002) and serve as breeding and nursery grounds for a wide range of aquatic and terrestrial species (Kumara et al 2010).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%