Green Crab Larval Retention in Willapa Bay, Washington: An Intensive Lagrangian Modeling Approach
Authored by Neil S Banas, P Sean McDonald, David A Armstrong
Date Published: 2009
DOI: 10.1007/s12237-009-9175-7
Sponsors:
United States National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA)
Platforms:
Java
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
The European green crab (Carcinus maenas) is invasive on the U.S. West
Coast. This study uses a high-resolution circulation model to determine
the likelihood that green crab larvae spawned in Willapa Bay, Washington
could be retained by circulation and behavior long enough to reach
maturity and resettle within the bay. A particle-tracking method (the
``diffusive Lagrangian return map{''}) is presented that makes it
possible to track the dispersion of hundreds of thousands of model
larvae-each subject to three-dimensional advection, vertical turbulent
diffusion, and imposed vertical migration behavior-over their full 30-50
days development time with modest computational resources. Larvae
spawned in summer show significant retention (5-40\%) in the southern
and western portions of the bay, including the Stackpole shoals near the
mouth, the area most likely to be colonized by late-stage megalopae
arriving from the coastal ocean. Larvae spawned in spring show much less
retention throughout the bay because of (1) increased flushing caused by
increased river input relative to summer conditions and (2) longer
development times caused by lower water temperatures. The role of larval
swimming behavior is secondary to hydrodynamics in setting these spatial
and seasonal patterns of retention.
Tags
Predation
California
Community structure
Coastal ocean
Pacific-northwest
Vertical migration rhythms
Carcinus-maenas l.
Horizontal transport
Cancer-magister
Dungeness crab