Seasonal and vertical variations in emergence behaviors of Neomysis americana
Authored by Mei Sato, Peter A Jumars
Date Published: 2008
DOI: 10.4319/lo.2008.53.4.1665
Sponsors:
United States Office of Naval Research (ONR)
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Emergence patterns were observed in the macrotidal Damariscotta River
estuary in Maine in fall 2005 and summer 2006. High temporal and
vertical resolution was achieved with two multifrequency echo sounders
sampling from 265 kHz to 3 MHz. Time-series waterfall plots and spectral
analysis revealed that emergence patterns observed at 265-420 kHz
(frequencies that detect animals larger than mesozooplankton) followed
combinations of diel and tidal rhythms that differed with both depth in
the water column and season. The dominant emergent species at the study
site, Neomysis americana, showed nocturnal emergence in summer. Toward
the end of its emergence season in fall, however, its dominant rhythm
shifted to semidiurnal (12.4-h period). The timing of major emergence in
the fall coincided with low slack tides near the surface but with peak
flood speed near the bottom, providing plausible mechanisms of retention
and selective tidal stream transport within the estuary. Our results
confirm earlier suggestions from net sampling that emergence in this
species is best conceived as a broadening of the vertical spread of the
population distribution rather than a migration of the bulk of the
population far off the bottom: Most individuals spent most of their time
near the bottom, even during emergence. Prior acoustic work that did not
resolve the lowermost water column reported emergent mysids to overwhelm
the holoplankton in biovolume, but it, too, seriously underestimated
mysid abundance because it failed to resolve this high concentration of
animals in the lowermost water column. In the mesozooplankton size
category, emergence reached surface waters only during low slack tides
and systematically avoided times of the fastest currents. This study
highlights the importance of high temporal and spatial sampling
resolution in detecting and understanding components of emergence and
points away from simple models of diel vertical migration toward
state-dependent, individual-based models of habitat utilization.
Tags
Migration
Predation
zooplankton
Variability
Maine
Strongly tidal estuary
Copepod emergence
Diel
Scattering
Mysids