Roles of vertical behavior in the open-ocean migration of teleplanic larvae: a modeling approach to the larval transport of Japanese spiny lobster
Authored by Yoichi Miyake, Shingo Kimura, Sachihiko Itoh, Seinen Chow, Keisuke Murakami, Satoshi Katayama, Aigo Takeshige, Hideaki Nakata
Date Published: 2015
DOI: 10.3354/meps11499
Sponsors:
Japanese Society for the Promotion of Science (JSPS)
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
The vertical behavior of planktonic larvae has been increasingly
recognized as an important factor in their transport. However, little is
known about the roles of this behavior in open-ocean migration of
teleplanic larvae. Using Japanese spiny lobster Panulirus japonicus in
the western North Pacific and adjacent waters as a model species, we
aimed to clarify (1) the effect of vertical behavior of larvae on
transport success, (2) migration pathways of larvae, and (3) mechanisms
that enable larvae to approach adult habitats before metamorphosing into
competent swimmers (pueruli). Larval transport was simulated using an
individual-based model with 10 different vertical behavior types (VBTs)
and mortality caused by exposure to water temperatures outside the range
(19-30 degrees C) at which wild larvae appear. The VBTs that started
transport at a shallow depth (1 m) had significantly higher transport
success than those that started at greater depths (>= 25 m). Of the
successful VBTs, those with ontogenetic vertical migration (OVM) showed
greater detrainment of particles from the Kuroshio Extension (KE) and
facilitated southwestward transport of particles in the recirculation
region. Furthermore, the results indicate that phyllosoma larvae are
transported by the Kuroshio, KE, and Kuroshio Countercurrent. Our study
suggested that (1) detrainment of phyllosoma larvae from the KE to the
recirculation region is facilitated by OVM and cross-frontal exchange at
the meander trough, and (2) southwestward transport to adult habitats
and avoidance of the low-temperature water shifting southward in winter
are facilitated by OVM and the beta spiral. These findings highlight the
importance of vertical behavior in open-ocean migration of teleplanic
larvae.
Tags
New-zealand
Population connectivity
Jasus-edwardsii
Coupled particle-tracking
Stage phyllosoma larvae
Western rock
lobster
East china sea
Panulirus-japonicus
Laboratory conditions
Hydrodynamic model