Modelling the effects of an oil spill on open populations of intertidal invertebrates
Authored by SE Forde
Date Published: 2002
DOI: 10.1046/j.1365-2664.2002.00737.x
Sponsors:
David and Lucile Packard Foundation
United States National Science Foundation (NSF)
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
1. Knowledge of the impact of oil spills on coastal communities, in
California and elsewhere, is currently limited by a lack of long-term
data, the inability to infer causality from monitoring studies, and the
necessarily limited spatial and temporal scales of experimental studies.
2. This study therefore used a modelling approach to investigate the
combined effects of different intensities of an oil spill and
recruitment variation on a barnacle Chthamalus fissus population. The
methodology and results are likely to apply to any similarly open marine
populations with dispersive larval forms.
3. The model consisted of a source population comprising individuals
that reproduced based on size and probability of mortality. Larvae from
the source population entered a larval pool. A proportion of the larvae
from the larval pool recruited to a focal population within the region.
4. The model was used to assess the effects on recruitment to the focal
population of (i) the size structure of the source population, (ii) the
intensity of oil spills in the source population, and (iii) recruitment
intensity to the focal population.
5. Differences in the size structure of the source population had little
effect on the reproductive output of the population relative to the
intensity of the oil spill. Similarly, the intensity of the oil spill
had a stronger influence on recruitment to the focal population than the
size structure of the source population. Size structure of the source
population was important, however, when evaluating the seasonal
trajectory of the focal population.
6. Modelling provides a format in which questions about the effects of
human impacts can be addressed that would be intractable using
experiments. The results of this model suggest that recruitment
variation, along with the processes underlying recruitment variation, are critical to predicting the effects of disturbance on open marine
populations.
Tags
Dynamics
Settlement
Australia
Recruitment
Community structure
Fecundity
Marine communities
Barnacles