Data from: Spatially explicit assessment of estuarine fish after Deepwater Horizon oil spill: tradeoffs in complexity and parsimony
Evaluating long-term contaminant effects on wildlife populations depends on spatial information about habitat quality, heterogeneity in contaminant exposure, and sensitivities and distributions of species integrated into a systems modeling approach. Rarely is this information readily available, maki...
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Zusammenfassung: | Evaluating long-term contaminant effects on wildlife populations depends
on spatial information about habitat quality, heterogeneity in contaminant
exposure, and sensitivities and distributions of species integrated into a
systems modeling approach. Rarely is this information readily available,
making it difficult to determine the applicability of realistic models to
quantify population-level risks. To evaluate the trade-offs between data
demands and increased specificity of spatially explicit models for
population-level risk assessments, we developed a model for a standard
toxicity test species, the sheepshead minnow (Cyprinodon variegatus)
exposed to oil contamination following the Deepwater Horizon oil spill and
compared the output with various levels of model complexity to a standard
risk quotient approach. The model uses habitat and fish occupancy data
collected over five sampling periods throughout 2008-2010 in Pensacola and
Choctawhatchee Bays, Florida, to predict species distribution,
field-collected and publically available data on oil distribution and
concentration, and chronic toxicity data from laboratory assays applied to
a matrix population model. The habitat suitability model established
distribution of fish within Barataria Bay, Louisiana, and the population
model projected the dynamics of the species in the study area over a
five-year period (October 2009 – September 2014). Vital rates were
modified according to estimated contaminant concentrations to simulate oil
exposure effects. To evaluate the differences in levels of model
complexity, simulations varied from temporally and spatially explicit,
including seasonal variation and location-specific oiling, to simple
interpretations of a risk quotient derived for the study area. The results
of this study indicate that species distribution, as well as spatially and
temporally variable contaminant concentrations, can provide a more
ecologically relevant evaluation of species recovery from catastrophic
environmental impacts but might not be cost-effective or efficient for
rapid assessment needs. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.4dn80 |