Recruitment in degraded marine habitats: A spatially explicit, individual-based model for spiny lobster
Authored by Kenneth A Rose, MJ Butler, TW Dolan, JH Hunt, WF Herrnkind
Date Published: 2005
DOI: 10.1890/04-1081
Sponsors:
Florida Sea Grant
Platforms:
Fortran
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Coastal habitats that serve as nursery grounds for numerous marine
species are badly degraded, yet the traditional means of modeling
populations of exploited marine species handle spatiotemporal changes in
habitat characteristics and life history dynamics poorly, if at all. To
explore how nursery habitat degradation impacts recruitment of a mobile, benthic species, we developed a spatially explicit, individual-based
model that describes the recruitment of Caribbean spiny lobster
(Panulirus argus) in the Florida Keys, where a cascade of environmental
disturbances has reconfigured nursery habitat structure. In recent
years, the region has experienced a series of linked perturbations, among them, seagrass die-offs, cyanobacteria blooms, and the mass
mortality of sponges. Sponges are important shelters for juvenile spiny
lobster, an abundant benthic predator that also sustains Florida's most
valuable fishery.
In the model, we simulated monthly settlement of individual lobster
postlarvae and the daily growth, mortality, shelter selection, and
movement of individual juvenile lobsters on a spatially explicit grid of
habitat cells configured to represent the Florida Keys coastal nursery.
Based on field habitat surveys, cells were designated as either seagrass
or hard-bottom, and hard-bottom cells were further characterized in
terms of their shelter- and size-specific lobster carrying capacities.
The effect of algal blooms on sponge mortality, hence lobster habitat
structure, was modeled based on the duration of exposure of each habitat
cell to the blooms. Ten-year simulations of lobster recruitment with and
without algal blooms suggest that the lobster population should be
surprisingly resilient to massive disturbances of this type. Data not
used in model development showed that predictions of large changes in
lobster shelter utilization, yet small effects on recruitment in
response to blooms, were realistic. The potentially severe impacts of
habitat loss on recruitment were averted by compensatory changes in
habitat utilization and mobility by larger individuals, coupled with
periods of fortuitously high larval settlement. Our model provides an
underutilized approach for assessing habitat effects on open populations
with complex life histories, and our results illustrate the potential
pitfalls of relying on intuition to infer the effects of habitat
perturbations on upper trophic levels.
Tags
Predation risk
Population-dynamics
Water-quality
Fish
Life-history
Florida bay
Panulirus-argus latreille
Die-off
Thalassia-testudinum
Mark-recapture