Consuelo Aguilar

University of Havana, Havana, Provincia de La Habana, Cuba

Are you Consuelo Aguilar?

Claim your profile

Publications (6)15.61 Total impact

  • Article: Natural and human-induced variability in the composition of fish assemblages in the Northwestern Cuban shelf.
    [show abstract] [hide abstract]
    ABSTRACT: The main goal of the study was to obtain field data to build a baseline of fish assemblage composition that can be used comparatively for future analyses of the impact of human actions in the region. A basic network of 68 sampling stations was defined for the entire region (4,050 km2). Fish assemblage species and size composition was estimated using visual census methods at three different spatial scales: a) entire region, b) inside the main reef area and c) along a human impact coastal gradient. Multivariate numerical analyses revealed habitat type as the main factor inducing spatial variability of fish community composition, while the level of human impact appears to play the main role in fish assemblage composition changes along the coast. A trend of decreasing fish size toward the east supports the theory of more severe human impact due to overfishing and higher urban pollution in that direction. This is the first detailed study along the northwest coast of Cuba that focuses on fish community structure and the natural and human-induced variations at different spatial scales for the entire NW shelf. This research also provides input for a more comprehensive understanding of coastal marine fish communities' status in the Gulf of Mexico basin.
    Revista de biologia tropical 09/2009; 57(3):721-40. · 0.46 Impact Factor
  • Source
    Article: Recent region-wide declines in Caribbean reef fish abundance.
    [show abstract] [hide abstract]
    ABSTRACT: Profound ecological changes are occurring on coral reefs throughout the tropics, with marked coral cover losses and concomitant algal increases, particularly in the Caribbean region. Historical declines in the abundance of large Caribbean reef fishes likely reflect centuries of overexploitation. However, effects of drastic recent degradation of reef habitats on reef fish assemblages have yet to be established. By using meta-analysis, we analyzed time series of reef fish density obtained from 48 studies that include 318 reefs across the Caribbean and span the time period 1955-2007. Our analyses show that overall reef fish density has been declining significantly for more than a decade, at rates that are consistent across all subregions of the Caribbean basin (2.7% to 6.0% loss per year) and in three of six trophic groups. Changes in fish density over the past half-century are modest relative to concurrent changes in benthic cover on Caribbean reefs. However, the recent significant decline in overall fish abundance and its consistency across several trophic groups and among both fished and nonfished species indicate that Caribbean fishes have begun to respond negatively to habitat degradation.
    Current Biology 04/2009; 19(7):590-5. · 9.65 Impact Factor
  • Article: [Trophie webs of reef fishes at Cuba's NW area. II. Functional groups].
    [show abstract] [hide abstract]
    ABSTRACT: A conceptual model of the food webs, mainly with fish, was built in a rocky shore of Havana City with data covering from October 2004 to February 2006. The stomach contents of the most abundant fish was complemented with the literature. We used the Relative Importance Index method to describe diets of carnivorous and omnivorous fish; and a modification of the Relative Abundance method for sponge eaters and herbivorous fish. Agglomerative numeric classification techniques were used to determine the diet's similarity. The matrix was made using Bray-Curtis dissimilarity index. Ten functional trophic groups were formed on the basis of diet similarity. The cascade effect is evidenced in this area by the big top predator shortage and the dominance of a few low trophic level species. The regulator role of top predators is low because of over-fishing: the trophic web of this area is highly altered.
    Revista de biologia tropical 10/2008; 56(3):1391-401. · 0.46 Impact Factor
  • Article: [Trophic webs of reef fishes in northwestern Cuba. I. Stomach contents].
    [show abstract] [hide abstract]
    ABSTRACT: Trophic webs of reef fishes in northwestern Cuba. I. Stomach contents. Studies on the reef fishes of Cuba are not rare, but most have two basic limitations: small sample sizes and exclusion of small species. Our study sampled more species and larger samples in the sublitoral region of Havana city (23 degrees 7.587' N, 82 degrees 25.793' W), 2-18 m deep. We collected fish weekly from October 2004 through February 2006 with traps and harpoon. Overfishing has modified the fish communities. We used the relative importance index to describe the diets of carnivore and omnivore species, and a modification of the relative abundance method for the herbivores and sponge-eating species. The main food items are benthonic crustaceans (crabs, shrimp, copepods) and bony fish (mainly demersal species). Most species are eurifagous and thus, less affected by anthropic disturbance than specialist feeders.
    Revista de biologia tropical 07/2008; 56(2):541-55. · 0.46 Impact Factor
  • Source
    Article: Effects-based assessment in a tropical coastal system: status of bicolor damselfish (Stegastes partitus) on the north shore of Cuba.
    [show abstract] [hide abstract]
    ABSTRACT: The research was carried out to determine whether there are individual-level differences in the bicolor damselfish (Stegastes partitus) within the altered fish communities located on the north coast of Havana, Cuba. There was strong evidence of changes in some morphological and physiological characteristics associated with the impact of land-based pollution in the coastal zone. A combination of impaired recruitment due to habitat degradation with increased food supply due to eutrophication seems to be the best explanation for fishes being heavier and longer at polluted sites. The change in the proportion of color patterns and a very high number of atretic oocytes in the ovaries of fish caught near the mouth of the Almendares River strongly support the idea that not only is the pollution of river waters affecting the marine life in the coastal zone, but also that this pollution has greater effects than the pollution coming from the discharge of Havana Harbor.
    Ecotoxicology and Environmental Safety 08/2007; 67(3):459-71. · 2.29 Impact Factor
  • Source
    Article: Fish assemblages on fringe coral reefs of the northern coast of Cuba near Havana Harbor.
    [show abstract] [hide abstract]
    ABSTRACT: It is difficult to separate effects on fish community assemblages due to anthropogenic stressors from natural factors. We examined small-bodied-fish communities along the northern coast of Cuba near Havana Harbor during the dry (February/March of 2000) and wet (June 2000) seasons. Over 35,000 individual fish were visually counted at 15 sites along the coast in three areas located 0-2.4, 2.4-6.1, and 6.1-10.3 km from the entrance to Havana Harbor. Fish communities in four substrate biotopes did not vary significantly between wet and dry seasons, but did vary with water depth. Proximity to Havana Harbor was the second most important factor affecting fish assemblages, and sites closest to the harbor had reduced populations of the bluehead wrasse (Thalassoma bifasciatum) and an increased abundance of slippery dick (Halichoeres bivittatus). More studies are required at the population and individual levels to link stressors (e.g., contaminants, siltation) directly to observed effects.
    Ecotoxicology and Environmental Safety 06/2004; 58(1):126-38. · 2.29 Impact Factor