Estimating larval production of a broadcast spawner: the influence of density, aggregation, and the fertilization Allee effect
Authored by Carolyn J Lundquist, Louis W Botsford
Date Published: 2011
DOI: 10.1139/f10-125
Sponsors:
United States National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA)
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
The effect of fishing on reproduction is typically quantified by
computing the effects of changes in the species abundance and age
structure on egg production. For broadcast spawners, reproduction also
depends on the local spatial distribution of individuals. Broadcast
spawners exhibit an Allee effect at low density: a decline in the
fertilization of eggs, owing to increased distance between spawners. We
present a method for assessing the likely impact of a fishery on
broadcast spawners, based on gamete dispersion dynamics and individual
spatial distributions. We use an individual-based model to simulate
larval production over a range of uncertainties in dispersion
characteristics. We illustrate our method for the red sea urchin, Strongylocentrotus franciscanus, fishery in northern California, USA.
The density of red sea urchins varied over space (0.1-1.6.m(-2)), and
indices of aggregation were highest at low densities. As gamete
dispersion distances increased, larval production exhibited a more
linear relationship with density. Average larval production in 1996-1998
was 33.8\% of production near the inception of the fishery. After
accounting for decreases in mean density, the fertilization Allee effect
accounted for 21.7 +/- 4.1\% of the decrease in larval production, and
45.2 +/- 21.7\% if sea urchins were not aggregated.
Tags
Settlement
New-zealand
Marine invertebrate
British-columbia
Northern
california
Urchin strongylocentrotus-franciscanus
Red-sea urchin
External
fertilization
Haliotis-kamtschatkana
Abalone haliotis