Spatio-temporal variability of larval abundance and settlement of Perna perna: differential delivery of mussels

We examined larval availability and settlement of the intertidal mussel Perna perna simultaneously at different spatial and temporal scales using a nested design at 2 sites, 3 km apart on the south coast of South Africa. Each site had 3 locations (300 m apart) where 5 artificial settler collectors w...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Porri, F, McQuaid, Christopher, Radloff, S E
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: 2006
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1011625
http://dx.doi.org/10.3354/meps315141
id ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-rhodes-vital-6877
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-rhodes-vital-68772018-12-11T04:30:22ZSpatio-temporal variability of larval abundance and settlement of Perna perna: differential delivery of musselsPorri, FMcQuaid, ChristopherRadloff, S EWe examined larval availability and settlement of the intertidal mussel Perna perna simultaneously at different spatial and temporal scales using a nested design at 2 sites, 3 km apart on the south coast of South Africa. Each site had 3 locations (300 m apart) where 5 artificial settler collectors were placed about 20 cm apart. Collectors were replaced on temporal scales varying from fortnightly (for 16 mo) to daily (2 series of 15 to 20 d). Each intertidal location was paired with an inshore location (these too were 300 m apart) within 500 m of the shore, where larval availability was measured by 3 vertical plankton hauls collected on the same dates as for settler sampling. There was strong temporal variation in abundances of larvae and settlers, and no correlation (r always < 0.14) was found between the two. Larvae were abundant only at the start of sampling and rare for the rest of the study, while distinct peaks in settler numbers occurred later. No spatial effect was detected for larval availability, while there was strong spatial variation in settlement at the location level. These results indicate that, on scales of 100s of m to km, delivery of larvae from the nearshore water column onto the shore is strongly differential, with some locations consistently receiving more settlers than others. We conclude that, at these sites, the patchiness in settlement observed on scales of 100s of m depends on differential delivery, rather than differential offshore distribution of larvae. We suggest that differential delivery is due to the effect of nearshore bottom topography on local hydrodynamics.2006textArticle10 pagespdfvital:6877http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1011625http://dx.doi.org/10.3354/meps315141English
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
description We examined larval availability and settlement of the intertidal mussel Perna perna simultaneously at different spatial and temporal scales using a nested design at 2 sites, 3 km apart on the south coast of South Africa. Each site had 3 locations (300 m apart) where 5 artificial settler collectors were placed about 20 cm apart. Collectors were replaced on temporal scales varying from fortnightly (for 16 mo) to daily (2 series of 15 to 20 d). Each intertidal location was paired with an inshore location (these too were 300 m apart) within 500 m of the shore, where larval availability was measured by 3 vertical plankton hauls collected on the same dates as for settler sampling. There was strong temporal variation in abundances of larvae and settlers, and no correlation (r always < 0.14) was found between the two. Larvae were abundant only at the start of sampling and rare for the rest of the study, while distinct peaks in settler numbers occurred later. No spatial effect was detected for larval availability, while there was strong spatial variation in settlement at the location level. These results indicate that, on scales of 100s of m to km, delivery of larvae from the nearshore water column onto the shore is strongly differential, with some locations consistently receiving more settlers than others. We conclude that, at these sites, the patchiness in settlement observed on scales of 100s of m depends on differential delivery, rather than differential offshore distribution of larvae. We suggest that differential delivery is due to the effect of nearshore bottom topography on local hydrodynamics.
author Porri, F
McQuaid, Christopher
Radloff, S E
spellingShingle Porri, F
McQuaid, Christopher
Radloff, S E
Spatio-temporal variability of larval abundance and settlement of Perna perna: differential delivery of mussels
author_facet Porri, F
McQuaid, Christopher
Radloff, S E
author_sort Porri, F
title Spatio-temporal variability of larval abundance and settlement of Perna perna: differential delivery of mussels
title_short Spatio-temporal variability of larval abundance and settlement of Perna perna: differential delivery of mussels
title_full Spatio-temporal variability of larval abundance and settlement of Perna perna: differential delivery of mussels
title_fullStr Spatio-temporal variability of larval abundance and settlement of Perna perna: differential delivery of mussels
title_full_unstemmed Spatio-temporal variability of larval abundance and settlement of Perna perna: differential delivery of mussels
title_sort spatio-temporal variability of larval abundance and settlement of perna perna: differential delivery of mussels
publishDate 2006
url http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1011625
http://dx.doi.org/10.3354/meps315141
work_keys_str_mv AT porrif spatiotemporalvariabilityoflarvalabundanceandsettlementofpernapernadifferentialdeliveryofmussels
AT mcquaidchristopher spatiotemporalvariabilityoflarvalabundanceandsettlementofpernapernadifferentialdeliveryofmussels
AT radloffse spatiotemporalvariabilityoflarvalabundanceandsettlementofpernapernadifferentialdeliveryofmussels
_version_ 1718801405225992192