Survival and dispersal variability of pelagic eggs and yolk-sac larvae of central and eastern baltic flounder (Platichthys flesus): application of biophysical models
Authored by Hans-Harald Hinrichsen, Christoph Petereit, Anders Nissling, Isa Wallin, Didzis Ustups, Ann-Britt Florin
Date Published: 2017
DOI: 10.1093/icesjms/fsw163
Sponsors:
European Union
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
A hydrodynamic model coupled with a Lagrangian particle tracking
technique was utilized to simulate spatially and temporally resolved
long-term environmentally related (i) size of habitat suitable for
reproduction, (ii) egg/yolk-sac larval survival, (iii) separation of
causes of mortality, and (iv) connectivity between spawning areas of
Baltic flounder with pelagic eggs. Information on reproduction habitat
requirements and mortality sources were obtained from field or
laboratory studies. In our modelling study we only quantified physical
processes generating heterogeneity in spatial distribution of eggs and
yolk-sac larvae, as e.g. predation is not accounted for. The spatial
extent of eggs and larvae represented as modelled particles is primarily
determined by oxygen and salinity conditions. The reproduction habitat
most suitable was determined for the Gdansk Deep, followed by the
Bornholm Basin. Relatively low habitat suitability was obtained for the
Arkona Basin and the Gotland Basin. The model runs also showed yolk-sac
larval survival to be to a large extent affected by sedimentation. Eggs
initially released in the Arkona Basin and Bornholm Basin are strongly
affected by sedimentation compared with those released in the Gdansk
Deep and Gotland Basin. Highest relative survival of eggs occurred in
the Gdansk Deep and in the Bornholm Basin. Relatively low survival rates
in the Gotland Basin were attributable to oxygen-dependent mortality.
Oxygen content had almost no impact on survival in the Arkona Basin. For
all spawning areas mortality caused by lethally low temperatures was
only evident after severe winters. Buoyancy of eggs and yolk-sac larvae
in relation to topographic features appear as a barrier for the
transport of eggs and yolk-sac larvae and potentially limits the
connectivity of early life stages between the different spawning areas.
Tags
connectivity
Mortality
Recruitment
Population-structure
Reproductive success
Cod gadus-morhua
Early-life stages
Environmental variability
Sea
Spawning habitat suitability
Juvenile flatfish
Buoyancy
Western
Egg buoyancy
Individual-based
modelling
Retention vs. dispersal