Mesoscale circulation determines broad spatio-temporal settlement patterns of lobster.

The influence of physical oceanographic processes on the dispersal of larvae is critical for understanding the ecology of species and for anticipating settlement into fisheries to aid long-term sustainable harvest. This study examines the mechanisms by which ocean currents shape larval dispersal and...

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Main Authors: Paulina Cetina-Heredia, Moninya Roughan, Geoffrey Liggins, Melinda A Coleman, Andrew Jeffs
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2019-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0211722
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spelling doaj-75d1f9eeca9944b385a106eeb04ca4da2021-03-03T20:55:00ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032019-01-01142e021172210.1371/journal.pone.0211722Mesoscale circulation determines broad spatio-temporal settlement patterns of lobster.Paulina Cetina-HerediaMoninya RoughanGeoffrey LigginsMelinda A ColemanAndrew JeffsThe influence of physical oceanographic processes on the dispersal of larvae is critical for understanding the ecology of species and for anticipating settlement into fisheries to aid long-term sustainable harvest. This study examines the mechanisms by which ocean currents shape larval dispersal and supply to the continental shelf-break, and the extent to which circulation determines settlement patterns using Sagmariasus verreauxi (Eastern Rock Lobster, ERL) as a model species. Despite the large range of factors that can impact larval dispersal, we show that within a Western Boundary Current system, mesoscale circulation explains broad spatio-temporal patterns of observed settlement including inter-annual and decadal variability along 500 km of coastline. To discern links between ocean circulation and settlement, we correlate a unique 21- year dataset of observed lobster settlement (i.e., early juvenile & pueruli abundance), with simulated larval settlement. Simulations use outputs of an eddy-resolving, data-assimilated, hydrodynamic model, incorporating ERL spawning strategy and larval duration. The latitude where the East Australian Current (EAC) deflects east and separates from the continent determines the limit between regions of low and high ERL settlement. We found that years with a persistent EAC flow have low settlement while years when mesoscale eddies prevail have high settlement; in fact, mesoscale eddies facilitate the transport of larvae to the continental shelf-break from offshore. Proxies for settlement based on circulation features observed with satellites could therefore be useful in predicting broadscale patterns of settlement orders of magnitudes to guide harvest limits.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0211722
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Paulina Cetina-Heredia
Moninya Roughan
Geoffrey Liggins
Melinda A Coleman
Andrew Jeffs
spellingShingle Paulina Cetina-Heredia
Moninya Roughan
Geoffrey Liggins
Melinda A Coleman
Andrew Jeffs
Mesoscale circulation determines broad spatio-temporal settlement patterns of lobster.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Paulina Cetina-Heredia
Moninya Roughan
Geoffrey Liggins
Melinda A Coleman
Andrew Jeffs
author_sort Paulina Cetina-Heredia
title Mesoscale circulation determines broad spatio-temporal settlement patterns of lobster.
title_short Mesoscale circulation determines broad spatio-temporal settlement patterns of lobster.
title_full Mesoscale circulation determines broad spatio-temporal settlement patterns of lobster.
title_fullStr Mesoscale circulation determines broad spatio-temporal settlement patterns of lobster.
title_full_unstemmed Mesoscale circulation determines broad spatio-temporal settlement patterns of lobster.
title_sort mesoscale circulation determines broad spatio-temporal settlement patterns of lobster.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2019-01-01
description The influence of physical oceanographic processes on the dispersal of larvae is critical for understanding the ecology of species and for anticipating settlement into fisheries to aid long-term sustainable harvest. This study examines the mechanisms by which ocean currents shape larval dispersal and supply to the continental shelf-break, and the extent to which circulation determines settlement patterns using Sagmariasus verreauxi (Eastern Rock Lobster, ERL) as a model species. Despite the large range of factors that can impact larval dispersal, we show that within a Western Boundary Current system, mesoscale circulation explains broad spatio-temporal patterns of observed settlement including inter-annual and decadal variability along 500 km of coastline. To discern links between ocean circulation and settlement, we correlate a unique 21- year dataset of observed lobster settlement (i.e., early juvenile & pueruli abundance), with simulated larval settlement. Simulations use outputs of an eddy-resolving, data-assimilated, hydrodynamic model, incorporating ERL spawning strategy and larval duration. The latitude where the East Australian Current (EAC) deflects east and separates from the continent determines the limit between regions of low and high ERL settlement. We found that years with a persistent EAC flow have low settlement while years when mesoscale eddies prevail have high settlement; in fact, mesoscale eddies facilitate the transport of larvae to the continental shelf-break from offshore. Proxies for settlement based on circulation features observed with satellites could therefore be useful in predicting broadscale patterns of settlement orders of magnitudes to guide harvest limits.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0211722
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