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MEPS 207:141-154 (2000)
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Abstract
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Spatial scaling of recruitment in four continental shelf fishes
Mark C. Sullivan1,*, Robert K. Cowen1,*, Kenneth W. Able2, Michael P. Fahay3
1Marine Sciences Research Center, State University of New York at Stony Brook, Stony Brook, New York 11794-5000, USA
2Marine Field Station, Institute of Marine and Coastal Sciences, Rutgers University, Tuckerton, New Jersey 08087, USA
3National Marine Fisheries Service, Northeast Fisheries Science Center, Sandy Hook Laboratory, Highlands, New Jersey 07732, USA
*Present address: Division of Marine Biology and Fisheries, Rosenstiel School of Marine and Atmospheric Science, University of Miami, Miami, Florida 33149-1098, USA. E mail: msullivan@rsmas.miami.edu
ABSTRACT: With the recent decline of several exploited populations of northwest Atlantic fishes, effort has been directed toward understanding the scales at which recruitment varies along with the deterministic processes underlying this variability. Using
surveys from 3 research submersible cruises (1994, 1997, 1998), we examined the distributions of 4 species of recently settled groundfish in relation to spatial scale on the New York Bight region of the continental shelf (USA). A hierarchical sampling
design was used to calculate the percent variability in abundance partitioned over 4 nested scales: submersible transect (~100 m), site (~10 km), shelf zone (~25 km), and sampling line (~100 km). For all years, early juveniles of Limanda ferruginea
(yellowtail flounder) were highly concentrated at the shelf-zone scale, where abundance followed the thermal contours of a mid-shelf cold pool of remnant winter water. Conversely, Hippoglossina oblonga (fourspot flounder) and
Citharichthys arctifrons (Gulf Stream flounder) were highly site-dependent, bounding the distribution of L. ferruginea at inner and outer shelf sites, respectively. Merluccius bilinearis (silver hake) exhibited moderate to high
variability partitioned over several scales. For all species, the absence of sampling-line variability suggested that settlement patterns were consistent across the breadth of the shelf, while substantial residual variance suggested that microscale-level
processes generated additional variability. Annual settlement of these early juveniles is highly specialized and cued to distinct aspects of the physical and biological setting of the New York Bight. Conceptually, these local habitat parameters can be
used to link nodes of high variability with the possible deterministic processes modifying recruitment. Our results underscore the critical contribution juvenile nursery habitats may have to the subsequent survival and growth of continental shelf
species.
KEY WORDS: Recruitment · Scale · Essential fish habitat · Continental shelf · New York Bight · Limanda ferruginea · Citharichthys arctifrons · Hippoglossina oblonga · Merluccius bilinearis
Full text in pdf format
Published in MEPS Vol.
207
(2000) on November 22
Print ISSN: 0171-8630; Online ISSN: 1616-1599.
Copyright © Inter-Research, Oldendorf/Luhe, 2000
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