Modeling larval connectivity of the Atlantic surfclams within the Middle Atlantic Bight: Model development, larval dispersal and metapopulation connectivity
Authored by Xinzhong Zhang, Dale Haidvogel, Daphne Munroe, Eric N Powell, John Klinck, Roger Mann, Frederic S Castruccio
Date Published: 2015
DOI: 10.1016/j.ecss.2014.11.033
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
To study the primary larval transport pathways and inter-population
connectivity patterns of the Atlantic surfclam, Spisula solidissima, a
coupled modeling system combining a physical circulation model of the
Middle Atlantic Bight (MAB), Georges Bank (GBK) and the Gulf of Maine
(GoM), and an individual-based surfclam larval model was implemented, validated and applied. Model validation shows that the model can
reproduce the observed physical circulation patterns and surface and
bottom water temperature, and recreates the observed distributions of
surfclam larvae during upwelling and downwelling events. The model
results show a typical along-shore connectivity pattern from the
northeast to the southwest among the surfclam populations distributed
from Georges Bank west and south along the MAB shelf. Continuous
surfclam larval input into regions off Delmarva (DMV) and New Jersey
(NJ) suggests that insufficient larval supply is unlikely to be the
factor causing the failure of the population to recover after the
observed decline of the surfclam populations in DMV and NJ from 1997 to
2005. The GBK surfclam population is relatively more isolated than
populations to the west and south in the MAB; model results suggest
substantial inter-population connectivity from southern New England to
the Delmarva region. Simulated surfclam larvae generally drift for over
one hundred kilometers along the shelf, but the distance traveled is
highly variable in space and over time. Surfclam larval growth and
transport are strongly impacted by the physical environment. This
suggests the need to further examine how the interaction between
environment, behavior, and physiology affects inter-population
connectivity. Larval vertical swimming and sinking behaviors have a
significant net effect of increasing larval drifting distances when
compared with a purely passive model, confirming the need to include
larval behavior. (C) 2014 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
Tags
Fish populations
Spisula-solidissima-similis
Marine invertebrate larvae
Inner
continental-shelf
Wind-driven estuary
Georges bank
Vertical-distribution
Particle-tracking
Bivalve
larvae
Eastern oyster