Vertical migration effects on the dispersion and recruitment of European anchovy larvae: From spawning to nursery areas
Authored by Andres Ospina-Alvarez, Isabel Palomera, Carolina Parada
Date Published: 2012
DOI: 10.1016/j.ecolmodel.2012.02.001
Sponsors:
European Union
Platforms:
Ichthyop
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Recruitment of European anchovy has been traditionally thought to
largely depend on the passive transport and dispersion of eggs and
larvae from spawning to nursery areas. Knowledge of the factors
influencing the vertical distribution of fish early stages, and
consequently influencing the transport, is a crucial issue in fisheries
science. The aim of this study is to assess the relevance of diel
vertical migration (DVM) as a mechanism involved in the transport of
European anchovy larvae toward nursery areas taking into account
age/stage-dependent vertical migration (i.e., the maximum migration). We
developed a simplified vertical migration sub-model for anchovy larvae
included in an Individual-based (IBM) hydrodynamic coupled model. Two
types of simulation experiments were conducted: (1) `Pure' Lagrangian
(passive) transport experiments and (2) biological behavior transport
experiments with a realistic scheme for egg-buoyancy, larval growth, and
DVM scheme. We detected high variability in the trajectory and final
position of larvae with 14 mm length between the passive and biological
behavior experiments. The particles were less clustered in the passive
transport experiment. In the biological experiment the particles were
aggregated depending on the mesoscale oceanographic structures, evidencing a transport associated to filaments and meanders. The
formation of schools was facilitated by the transport in filaments and
larvae transported within filaments generally avoided the nucleus of the
eddies and the central part of the North Current. Moreover, our results
suggest that there is interconnectivity between all the anchovy
sub-populations in the NW Mediterranean and that the Gulf of Lions and
the shelf waters surrounding the Ebro River Delta are the most important
areas for anchovy reproduction in this region. Additionally, we detected
that the pre-recruitment is higher in those years when the larvae
retention is favored. We underline that bottlenecks in larval transport
modeling are related to the scarcity of knowledge in developmental
biology and behavior of anchovy larvae and emergent mechanistic
processes. (C) 2012 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Tags
Individual-based model
Spatial-distribution
Sardine sardinops-sagax
Fish larvae
Early-life-history
Southern benguela
Engraulis-encrasicolus larvae
Western mediterranean-sea
Northeast spanish coast
Surface circulation