Linking water quality to larval survival: predation mortality of fish larvae in an oxygen-stratified water column
Authored by Kenneth A Rose, JH Cowan, DL Breitburg
Date Published: 1999
DOI: 10.3354/meps178039
Sponsors:
United States National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA)
United States Department of Energy (DOE)
Electric Power Research Institute (EPRI)
Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL)
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Low dissolved oxygen concentrations can affect growth rates, distributions and predator-prey interactions of aquatic organisms. Each
of these potential effects is generally examined separately in
laboratory and field studies. As a result, it is often difficult to
determine the net influence of low oxygen on survival and which
individual effect of low oxygen contributes most to mortality. We used a
spatially explicit individual-based predation model to predict how
effects of low dissolved oxygen on vertical distributions, predation
rates, and larval growth combine to influence survival of estuarine fish
larvae in a water column where the subpycnocline (bottom) and pycnocline
layers are subject to oxygen depletion, We analyzed simulations
involving 3 predators (scyphomedusae based on Chrysaora quinquecirrha, and fish that were relatively sensitive to, or tolerant of, low
dissolved oxygen), water columns that differed in the relative thickness
of the subpycnocline layer, and bottom dissolved oxygen concentrations
ranging from cl mg l(-1) to no-effect concentrations. The effect of
dissolved oxygen on larval and predator Vertical distributions, predator
capture success and larval growth rates in simulations were based on
previous experiments and field sampling in the Patuxent River. a
tributary of the Chesapeake Bay, USA. Simulations indicated that bottom
dissolved oxygen can strongly affect predation mortality of fish larvae.
Thus, there is the potential for eutrophication to have a large effect
on larval fish survival, and possibly recruitment, even in the absence
of direct effects of low oxygen-induced mortality of larvae or the
effects of nutrient enrichment on the abundance of larval prey or
predators. Depending on predator characteristics and water column depth, lowest larval survival occurred when oxygen concentrations were either
<1 mg l(-1) or sufficiently high that oxygen concentration had no effect
on distributions or capture rates; highest survival generally occurred
with hypoxic bottom layers (1 to 2 mg l(-1) dissolved oxygen). Bottom
dissolved oxygen concentration also strongly affected the relative
importance of fish and sea nettle predation in simulations that included
both types of predators. Differences among predator types had important
consequences for the magnitude and location of predation. Bottom-layer
oxygen depletion shifted the focus of trophic interactions into the
pycnocline and surface layers. Additional simulations indicated that
distributional and capture success effects on larval survival were more
important than growth rate effects, and that the direction of effects
depended on the predator type and dissolved oxygen concentrations.
Limitations of the model as well as implications of results for efforts
to reduce nutrient loadings into estuaries are discussed.
Tags
vulnerability
Hypoxia
Populations
Size
Planktivorous fish
Chesapeake bay
Striped bass
Ctenophores
Low dissolved-oxygen
Scyphomedusae