A full life history synthesis of Arrowtooth Flounder ecology in the Gulf of Alaska: Exposure and sensitivity to potential ecosystem change
Authored by Miriam J Doyle, Casey Debenham, Steven J Barbeaux, Troy W Buckley, Jodi L Pirtle, Ingrid B Spies, William T Stockhausen, S Kalei Shotwell, Matthew T Wilson, Daniel W Cooper
Date Published: 2018
DOI: 10.1016/j.seares.2018.08.001
Sponsors:
United States National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA)
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
In recent decades, Arrowtooth Flounder (Atheresthes stomias) has been
the most abundant groundfish in the Gulf of Alaska and an apex predator
with trophic links to many pelagic and benthic species. Its abundance
and trophic status implies that a small change in survival may result in
substantial uncertainty in the ecosystem, with potentially large effects
across multiple species. A synthesis of Arrowtooth Flounder ecology in
the Gulf of Alaska was undertaken to determine exposure to the
environment during different life history stages, and to develop
hypotheses regarding population response to environmental forcing.
Historical data sets were used to identify mechanisms of interaction
with the pelagic environment during the egg and larval phase, assess
habitat utilization and trophic interactions from early settlement
through adult life, and evaluate sensitivity and potential response of
the population to climate-induced variability in the Gulf of Alaska
ecosystem. Modeling approaches include Individual-Based Modeling of the
planktonic drift phase from spawning to settlement, Generalized Additive
Modeling to examine the effects of location, bottom temperature, and
depth on the distribution and density of different size categories of
fish, and Habitat Suitability Modeling which integrates presence-absence
and environmental data to develop predictive maps of suitable habitat
for early juveniles, late juveniles, and adults. A strategy of high
endurance characterizes the early ontogeny phase. Spawning and hatching
occur during winter in deep water where predation risk is relatively
low, and cold temperatures along with intrinsically low metabolic rates
ensure extended availability of yolk reserves, lowering the risk of
larval starvation in a food-poor environment. Larval duration and drift
is protracted, contributing to widespread delivery of larvae to coastal,
continental shelf and slope waters throughout the Gulf of Alaska, as
well as expected transportation into the Bering Sea through the Aleutian
Island Passes. Connectivity between spawning and settlement areas is
less directed and juveniles are more ubiquitous across depths than
previously understood. Juvenile and adult Arrowtooth Flounder are
habitat and prey generalists, with some ontogenetic shifts apparent.
Based on this comprehensive ecological synthesis, a preliminary
climate-related vulnerability assessment indicates low risk, high
resilience overall for this species in the Gulf of Alaska. However, some
stage-specific sensitivity is hypothesized primarily relating to the
potential for exacerbated temporal mis-match between early larvae and
suitable zooplankton prey with increased temperatures. Density-dependent
effects during the juvenile to adult stage may constrain further
increases in Arrowtooth Flounder biomass in the Gulf of Alaska. This
comprehensive ecological approach to assessing environmental
sensitivities across life history stages for a commercially and
ecologically important fish species has substantial merit for furthering
the ecosystem approach to fisheries management, especially in marine
ecosystems where there are robust sampling programs across trophic
levels.
Tags
time-series
resilience
Climate-change
Fish
Northern gulf
Eastern bering-sea
Walleye pollock
Coastal gulf
Arrowtooth flounder
Gulf of alaska
Ecological synthesis
Vulnerability
assessment
Atheresthes-stomias
Kodiak island
Pacific cod