Do the Brazilian sardine commercial landings respond to local ocean circulation?
Authored by Mainara B Gouveia, Douglas F M Gherardi, Carlos A D Lentini, Daniela F Dias, Paula C Campos
Date Published: 2017
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0176808
Sponsors:
Brazilian Ministry of Education (CAPES)
Brazilian National Council for Scientific and Technological Development (CNPq)
São Paulo Research Foundation (FAPESP)
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
It has been reported that sea surface temperature (SST) anomalies, flow
intensity and mesoscale ocean processes, all affect sardine production,
both in eastern and western boundary current systems. Here we tested the
hypothesis whether extreme high and low commercial landings of the
Brazilian sardine fisheries in the South Brazil Bight (SBB) are
sensitive to different oceanic conditions. An ocean model (ROMS) and an
individual based model (Ichthyop) were used to assess the relationship
between oceanic conditions during the spawning season and commercial
landings of the Brazilian sardine one year later. Model output was
compared with remote sensing and analysis data showing good consistency.
Simulations indicate that mortality of eggs and larvae by low
temperature prior to maximum and minimum landings are significantly
higher than mortality caused by offshore advection. However, when
periods of maximum and minimum sardine landings are compared with
respect to these causes of mortality no significant differences were
detected. Results indicate that mortality caused by prevailing oceanic
conditions at early life stages alone can not be invoked to explain the
observed extreme commercial landings of the Brazilian sardine. Likely
influencing factors include starvation and predation interacting with
the strategy of spawning ``at the right place and at the right time{''}.
Tags
patterns
Ecosystem
Environments
Transport
Sea-surface temperature
Pacific
Atlantic
To-end model
Brasiliensis
Oceanography