Relative Condition Factors of Fish as Bioindicators One Year after the Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill
Joshua Courtney, Taylor Klinkmann, Amy Courtney, Joseph Torano, and, Michael Courtney

TL;DR
This study assessed fish health as bioindicators one year after the Deepwater Horizon oil spill by measuring relative condition factors of specific fish species in Louisiana estuaries.
Contribution
It provides novel data on the impact of the oil spill on fish condition factors and food sources in affected estuaries after one year.
Findings
Black and red drum showed reduced condition factors indicating food source impacts.
Spotted seatrout showed minimal or no reduction in condition factors.
Results suggest ongoing ecological effects of the oil spill on local fish populations.
Abstract
Creel surveys were performed over a three week period in late spring, 2011, in the Lafourche and Calcasieu area estuaries of the Louisiana Gulf Coast. Weights and lengths were measured for black drum (Pogonias cromis), red drum (Sciaenops ocellatus), and spotted seatrout (Cynoscion nebulosus), and relative condition factors were calculated relative to expected weights from the long term (5 year) Louisiana data for each species. A normal relative condition factor is 1.00. The mean relative condition factors in the Lafourche area were black drum, 0.955 (0.020); red drum, 0.955 (0.011); spotted seatrout, 0.994 (0.009). In the Calcasieu area, the mean relative condition factors were black drum, 0.934 (0.017); red drum, 0.965 (0.014); spotted seatrout, 0.971 (0.010). Uncertainties are in parentheses. Results suggest that the abundance of primary food sources for black drum and red drum in…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMarine and fisheries research · Fish Ecology and Management Studies
