Seagrass meadows as seascape nurseries for rockfish (Sebastes spp.)

Nearshore marine habitats provide critical nursery grounds for juvenile fishes, but their functional role requires the consideration of the impacts of spatial connectivity. This thesis examines nursery function in seagrass habitats through a marine landscape (“seascape”) lens, focusing on the spa...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Olson, Angeleen
Other Authors: Juanes, Francis
Format: Others
Language:English
en
Published: 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1828/7943
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spelling ndltd-uvic.ca-oai-dspace.library.uvic.ca-1828-79432018-04-14T19:45:38Z Seagrass meadows as seascape nurseries for rockfish (Sebastes spp.) Olson, Angeleen Juanes, Francis Hessing-Lewis, Margot seagrass nursery rockfish food web seascape stable isotope recruitment connectivity Nearshore marine habitats provide critical nursery grounds for juvenile fishes, but their functional role requires the consideration of the impacts of spatial connectivity. This thesis examines nursery function in seagrass habitats through a marine landscape (“seascape”) lens, focusing on the spatial interactions between habitats, and their effects on population and trophic dynamics associated with nursery function to rockfish (Sebastes spp.). In the temperate Pacific Ocean, rockfish depend on nearshore habitats after an open-ocean, pelagic larval period. I investigate the role of two important spatial attributes, habitat adjacency and complexity, on rockfish recruitment to seagrass meadows, and the provision of subsidies to rockfish food webs. To test for these effects, underwater visual surveys and collections of young-of-the-year (YOY) Copper Rockfish recruitment (summer 2015) were compared across adjacent seagrass, kelp forest, and sand habitats within a nearshore seascape on the Central Coast of British Columbia. Recruitment was positively influenced by the structural complexity of seagrass and adjacency to kelp forest sites, however a negative interaction between seagrass complexity and kelp forest adjacency suggests that predation modifies Copper Rockfish recruitment densities. In addition, using δ13C and δ15N isotopes to determine the basal contributions to seagrass food webs, kelp-derived nutrients were on average 47% ± 0.4 of YOY Copper Rockfish diets, which was 3x and 67x greater than the contribution of autochthonous seagrass production (seagrass epiphyte and seagrass blades, respectively). YOY Copper Rockfish diets in seagrass adjacent to sand habitats had the greatest amounts of kelp-derived nutrients and harpacticoid copepods, and concurrently had lower body condition compared to rockfish in the seagrass kelp edges and interior, feeding predominantly on seagrass epiphytes and calanoid copepods. This thesis provides further evidence that temperate seagrasses are nurseries for rockfish and that spatial elements of seascapes, including connectivity via habitat adjacency and variability in habitat structure, alter the recruitment and diets of rockfish in seagrass habitats. These seascape nursery effects are important considerations for marine planning, especially given the global decline of nearshore habitats. Graduate 2017-04-24T14:25:15Z 2017-04-24T14:25:15Z 2017 2017-04-24 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/1828/7943 English en Available to the World Wide Web http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.5/ca/ application/pdf
collection NDLTD
language English
en
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic seagrass
nursery
rockfish
food web
seascape
stable isotope
recruitment
connectivity
spellingShingle seagrass
nursery
rockfish
food web
seascape
stable isotope
recruitment
connectivity
Olson, Angeleen
Seagrass meadows as seascape nurseries for rockfish (Sebastes spp.)
description Nearshore marine habitats provide critical nursery grounds for juvenile fishes, but their functional role requires the consideration of the impacts of spatial connectivity. This thesis examines nursery function in seagrass habitats through a marine landscape (“seascape”) lens, focusing on the spatial interactions between habitats, and their effects on population and trophic dynamics associated with nursery function to rockfish (Sebastes spp.). In the temperate Pacific Ocean, rockfish depend on nearshore habitats after an open-ocean, pelagic larval period. I investigate the role of two important spatial attributes, habitat adjacency and complexity, on rockfish recruitment to seagrass meadows, and the provision of subsidies to rockfish food webs. To test for these effects, underwater visual surveys and collections of young-of-the-year (YOY) Copper Rockfish recruitment (summer 2015) were compared across adjacent seagrass, kelp forest, and sand habitats within a nearshore seascape on the Central Coast of British Columbia. Recruitment was positively influenced by the structural complexity of seagrass and adjacency to kelp forest sites, however a negative interaction between seagrass complexity and kelp forest adjacency suggests that predation modifies Copper Rockfish recruitment densities. In addition, using δ13C and δ15N isotopes to determine the basal contributions to seagrass food webs, kelp-derived nutrients were on average 47% ± 0.4 of YOY Copper Rockfish diets, which was 3x and 67x greater than the contribution of autochthonous seagrass production (seagrass epiphyte and seagrass blades, respectively). YOY Copper Rockfish diets in seagrass adjacent to sand habitats had the greatest amounts of kelp-derived nutrients and harpacticoid copepods, and concurrently had lower body condition compared to rockfish in the seagrass kelp edges and interior, feeding predominantly on seagrass epiphytes and calanoid copepods. This thesis provides further evidence that temperate seagrasses are nurseries for rockfish and that spatial elements of seascapes, including connectivity via habitat adjacency and variability in habitat structure, alter the recruitment and diets of rockfish in seagrass habitats. These seascape nursery effects are important considerations for marine planning, especially given the global decline of nearshore habitats. === Graduate
author2 Juanes, Francis
author_facet Juanes, Francis
Olson, Angeleen
author Olson, Angeleen
author_sort Olson, Angeleen
title Seagrass meadows as seascape nurseries for rockfish (Sebastes spp.)
title_short Seagrass meadows as seascape nurseries for rockfish (Sebastes spp.)
title_full Seagrass meadows as seascape nurseries for rockfish (Sebastes spp.)
title_fullStr Seagrass meadows as seascape nurseries for rockfish (Sebastes spp.)
title_full_unstemmed Seagrass meadows as seascape nurseries for rockfish (Sebastes spp.)
title_sort seagrass meadows as seascape nurseries for rockfish (sebastes spp.)
publishDate 2017
url http://hdl.handle.net/1828/7943
work_keys_str_mv AT olsonangeleen seagrassmeadowsasseascapenurseriesforrockfishsebastesspp
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