Modeling spatiotemporal dynamics of krill aggregations: size, intensity, persistence, and coherence with seabirds
Authored by Jarrod A Santora, William J Sydeman, Jeffrey G Dorman
Date Published: 2017
DOI: 10.1111/ecog.02250
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Abstract
Understanding aggregation dynamics of forage species is important for
evaluating biophysical scaling in marine ecosystems and heterogeneity of
trophic interactions. In particular, zooplankton aggregations are
fundamental units of many pelagic systems, but are difficult to observe
continuously through space and time. Using an established modeling
framework that encompasses a coupled regional oceanographic and
individual-based modeling system, we test the hypothesis that
persistence (duration) of krill aggregations is dependent on their size,
intensity, and location of formation within the coastal upwelling region
of the California Current. In support of this hypothesis, we found that
aggregation size is positively related to intensity, whereas persistence
has a parabolic response to aggregation size and intensity, indicating
the likelihood that large and highly persistent aggregations are rare.
Persistence of krill aggregations also depends on formation location
within coastal upwelling areas. We found that krill aggregations were
more likely to form near a major seabird colony and that some coastal
upwelling areas act as sources of aggregations for other areas.
Observations of seabird aggregations were used to evaluate the potential
structural realism of predicted krill aggregations. Seabird aggregations
displayed marked coherence with predicted krill aggregations in space,
providing important criteria on the scaling and availability of krill
aggregations to breeding and migratory species. Predicting scales of
krill aggregation dynamics will benefit ecosystem assessments, and
numerical modeling of predator foraging and marine spatial management
aimed at ensuring protection of ecologically important areas.
Tags
Emergent properties
Population-dynamics
Fish schools
Upwelling system
Marine
ecosystems
Northern california
Euphausia-pacifica
Trophic transfer
California current implications
Ocean conditions