Larval transport in the upwelling ecosystem of central Chile: The effects of vertical migration, developmental time and coastal topography on recruitment
Authored by Andres Ospina-Alvarez, Nicolas Weidberg, Christopher M Aiken, Sergio A Navarrete
Date Published: 2018
DOI: 10.1016/j.pocean.2018.09.016
Sponsors:
FONDECYT (Fondo Nacional de Ciencia y Tecnologia of the Chilean Government)
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Flow charts
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Several empirical plankton studies and realistic numerical models of the
coastal ocean have clearly shown the dramatic effects that larval
behaviour and coastal topography can have on effective alongshore
dispersal, population connectivity, successful recruitment and
cross-shore distribution of the larval stages of benthic coastal
invertebrates and fish. All these are essentially distinct and
ecologically important aspects of the dispersal process, but which are
correlated to a greater or lesser extent through the interaction of
larval attributes (e.g., behaviour, pelagic larval duration, PLD) and
specific velocity fields of a region of the ocean. Vertical positioning
in the water column and ontogenetic and diel vertical migration (DVM)
have been identified as the most efficient behavioural mechanisms that
can modulate larval transport in the ocean, especially in stratified,
baroclinic water columns such as those typically found in upwelling
ecosystems. The large seasonal variability in circulation within most
upwelling ecosystems is therefore expected to deeply influence all
aspects of the larval dispersal process, but it has been less
researched. Here, we use a realistic representation of velocity fields
across a section of the Humboldt Current Upwelling Ecosystem (HCUE) to
evaluate the relative effects of variation in PLD, geographic position,
DVM and the timing of larval release on successful onshore recruitment,
alongshore dispersal distances, cross-shore retention and persistence of
recruitment spatial patterns. Our results show that an increase in
pelagic larval duration exponentially increase larval waste,
consequently reducing onshore recruitment, regardless of whether larvae
perform DVM or not during their development. For any given larval
duration, season of the year and location along the shore (topography)
had the largest effects on recruitment variability, explaining over
8.49\% and over 11.47\% of the temporal and spatial variation,
respectively. In contrast, while DVM had a highly consistent positive
effect on recruitment along the shore, PLD's and seasons, it only
explained about 3\% of recruitment variability. Thus, while performing
DVM appears to be a safe strategy to increase recruitment, selective
forces for such behaviour maybe weak when only oceanic transport is
considered. Neither season of the year, nor larval behaviour altered the
broad spatial pattern of recruitment across the study region. Pelagic
larval durations of over 20 days did not significantly alter this
spatial pattern either, suggesting the existence of persistent sources
and sinks for benthic populations across the region, although the
connectivity matrices must be examined in more detail. Interestingly, in
the section of the HCUE, the DVM behaviour led to significantly higher
mean dispersal distances along the shore during the upwelling season, as
compared to passively advected particles. Such a behavioural effect on
dispersal distances have all but disappeared when larvae were released
in winter time. These results demonstrate that onshore recruitment,
dispersal and connectivity among populations are not correlated across
the different larval behaviours, as it has often been implied in the
literature and that timing of peak larval release must receive more
attention within the HCUE. Results also illustrate the importance of
examining fundamental questions of the dispersal process, distance,
recruitment, retention, connectivity, in different regions of the
world's costal ocean.
Tags
individual-based models
IBM
zooplankton
Population connectivity
Larval dispersal
Upwelling system
Southern benguela
Spatial variation
Biophysical model
Hydrodynamic model
Anchovy engraulis-capensis
Larval transport
Dvm
Cross-shelf
transport
Concholepas-concholepas
Latitudinal
variation
European anchovy
Loxechinus-albus