How Life History Characteristics and Environmental Forcing Shape Settlement Success of Coral Reef Fishes
Authored by Jennifer A T K Wong-Ala, Christina M Comfort, Jamison M Gove, Mark A Hixon, Margaret A McManus, Brian S Powell, Jonathan L Whitney, Anna B Neuheimer
Date Published: 2018
DOI: 10.3389/fmars.2018.00065
Sponsors:
United States National Science Foundation (NSF)
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Larval settlement is shaped by the interaction of biological processes
(e.g., life history strategies, behavior etc.) and the environment
(e.g., temperature, currents etc.). This is particularly true for many
reef fishes where larval stages disperse offshore, often spending weeks
to months in the pelagic realm before settling to shallow-water reefs.
Our ability to predict reef fish settlement and subsequent recruitment
and population dynamics depends on our ability to characterize how
biological processes interact with the dynamic physical environment.
Here we develop and apply an individual-based model that combines
biological processes with high-resolution physical forcing to predict
larval fish dispersal and settlement over time and space. Our model
tracks individual larval fish from spawning to settlement and allows for
the inclusion of biologically relevant stochasticity (individual
variability) in modeled processes. Our model is also trait-based, which
allows individuals to vary in life history characteristics, making it
possible to mechanistically link the resulting variability in settlement
probabilities to underlying traits such as spawning date and location,
pelagic larval duration (PLD), body morphology, etc. We employ our
biophysical model to examine how biology interacts with the physical
environment to shape settlement predictions for reef fish off western
and southern Hawai'i Island. Linked to prevailing surface currents, we
find increased probabilities of settling associated with shorter PLDs
and fish spawned in southern and southwestern locations. Superimposed on
this, eddies, common to leeward Hawaii Island, offer a second pathway to
successful settlement for individuals with longer PLDs, particularly for
fish spawning in summer months. Finally, we illustrate how lunar-timed
spawning as well as morphological features (e.g., fin and head spines)
may impact settlement success by altering the mortality landscape
experienced by larvae. This work identifies life history characteristics
that predict the self-recruitment pathways necessary for population
persistence for the relatively isolated Hawai`i Island. Our results can
be used to develop future hypotheses regarding temporal and spatial
variation in recruitment for reef fishes on Hawai'i Island and beyond.
Tags
Individual-based model
connectivity
Settlement
Mortality
Recruitment
Population-dynamics
Natural-selection
Larval dispersal
Particle-tracking
Oyster larvae
Reef fish
Pelagic larval duration
Mesoscale eddies
Early life history
Hawai'i island
Yellow tang
Range
size