Physical and behavioural influences on larval fish retention: contrasting patterns in two Antarctic fishes

Waters around South Georgia are amongst the most productive in the Southern Ocean, and support internationally important fisheries. However, there is significant inter-annual variability in fish stocks, and some species have failed to recover from historical overfishing. Dispersal and retention of t...

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Veröffentlicht in:Marine ecology. Progress series (Halstenbek) 2012-09, Vol.465, p.201-215
Hauptverfasser: Young, Emma F., Rock, Jennifer, Meredith, Michael P., Belchier, Mark, Murphy, Eugene J., Carvalho, Gary R.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Waters around South Georgia are amongst the most productive in the Southern Ocean, and support internationally important fisheries. However, there is significant inter-annual variability in fish stocks, and some species have failed to recover from historical overfishing. Dispersal and retention of the planktonic eggs and larvae of marine fish can play a key role in the maintenance of adult stocks. We use a numerical modelling approach to examine the influence of oceanographic and life-history variability on the dispersal and retention of 2 Antarctic fishes:Champsocephalus gunnari(mackerel icefish) andNotothenia rossii(marbled rockcod). Mean retention ofN. rossiilarvae was predicted to be 5.3%, considerably lower than that ofC. gunnari(31.3%), a difference related to the longer planktonic period of the former. Such apparent loss of larvae from local recruitment grounds may contribute to the failure of theN. rossiipopulation to recover from its collapse in the 1970s. However, retention of both species showed high interannual variability. Dispersal and retention ofC. gunnariwere strongly influenced by location of the spawning site, with the greatest contribution to overall retention from spawning sites on the southwest South Georgia shelf. In addition, a consistent feature inC. gunnariwas a lack of larval exchange between the proximate South Georgia and Shag Rocks shelves, regions separated by only 240 km. Our findings provide insights into the demographic dynamics and connectivity ofC. gunnariandN. rossiipopulations at South Georgia in relation to prospects for recovery and ongoing responses to environmental variability and change in the region.
ISSN:0171-8630
1616-1599
DOI:10.3354/meps09908