Modeling the dispersal of Cape hake ichthyoplankton
Authored by Christophe Lett, N Chang, L Garavelli, A Gruess, B Grote, M Smith, P Verley, E K Stenevik, D M Kaplan
Date Published: 2012
DOI: 10.1093/plankt/fbs039
Sponsors:
French National Research Agency (ANR)
Platforms:
Ichthyop
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
The two Cape hake species of the southern Benguela ecosystem, the
shallow-water and deep-water hakes Merluccius capensis and M. paradoxus, are economically the most important marine resources in South Africa.
Recruitment is a key process in the dynamics of marine organisms, yet
very little is known about the early life history of Cape hakes, especially the location of spawning grounds and transport of eggs and
larvae. For each species, ichthyoplankton dispersal off South Africa is
simulated by coupling oceanographic simulations to an individual-based
model in order to track virtual individuals. Results indicate that the
most favorable spawning areas for transport to nursery areas are located
off the south-western coast and the eastern Agulhas Bank, and highlight
partly different drift routes followed by the two ichthyoplankton
species off Cape Columbine. Transport from spawning to nursery areas is
the highest in austral winter for a spawning depth ranging between 0 and
100 m. These modeling results are in broad agreement with available
knowledge on the ecology of Cape hakes. The present work on Cape hakes
complements previous modeling studies on anchovy and sardine in the same
area. Taken together, these studies underline the correspondence between
cross-shore (for hakes) or alongshore (for anchovy and sardine)
transport mechanisms and the spawning strategies used by these key
species of the southern Benguela ecosystem.
Tags
Fish larvae
Early-life-history
Nursery areas
Southern benguela
Northern benguela
Benguela upwelling region
Merluccius-paradoxus
Satellite imagery
European
hake
Anchovy