Modelled connectivity between Walleye Pollock (Gadus chalcogrammus) spawning and age-0 nursery areas in warm and cold years with implications for juvenile survival
Authored by Colleen M Petrik, Enrique N Curchitser, Janet T Duffy-Anderson, Frederic Castruccio, Seth L Danielson, Katherine Hedstrom, Franz Mueter
Date Published: 2016
DOI: 10.1093/icesjms/fsw004
Sponsors:
United States National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA)
United States National Science Foundation (NSF)
National Marine Fisheries Service
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Adult and early life stage distributions of the commercially important
demersal fish Walleye Pollock (Gadus chalcogrammus) have varied in
relation to the warm and cold environmental conditions on the eastern
Bering Sea (EBS) shelf. Previous modelling studies indicate that
transport alone does not account for the disparate juvenile
distributions in warm and cold years, but that spawning locations are
important. Our objective was to determine the potential connectivity of
EBS pollock spawning areas with juvenile nursery areas between warm and
cold years from an 18-year hindcast (1995-2012). We calculated the
connectivity between larval sources and juvenile positions that were
produced by a coupled biological-physical individual-based model that
simulated transport, growth, and vertical behavior of pollock from the
egg until the juvenile stage. Three connectivity patterns were seen in
most simulations: along-isobaths to the northwest, self-retention, and
transport around the Pribilof Islands. The major differences in
connectivity between warm and cold years, more northwards in warm years
and more off-shelf in cold years, mimicked wind-driven flow
characteristics of those years that were related to winter mean zonal
position of the Aleutian Low. Connectivity relationships were more
sensitive to spatial alterations in the spawning areas in cold years, while they were more responsive to spawn timing shifts in warm years.
The strongest connectivity to advantageous juvenile habitats originated
in the well-known spawning areas, but also in a less well-studied region
on the Outer Shelf. This northern Outer Shelf region emerged as a very
large sink of pollock reaching the juvenile transition from all spawning
sources, suggesting more thorough sampling across multiple trophic
levels of this potentially important juvenile pollock nursery is needed.
Tags
Variability
Ocean
Continental-shelf
Population
connectivity
Theragra-chalcogramma
Eastern bering-sea
Pribilof-islands
Temporal patterns
Future climate
Forage fish