Author:
Butler IV Mark J.,Dolan Thomas,Herrnkind William,Hunt John
Abstract
Many field studies have shown that recruitment of the Caribbean spiny lobster,
Panulirus argus, is sensitive to variation in both
postlarval supply and local nursery-habitat structure. We used a spatially
explicit individual-based model, to investigate the effects of (i)
spatio-temporal variation in postlarval supply and (ii) changes in the spatial
structure of the nursery habitat on lobster recruitment to the Florida Keys,
Florida (USA). By simulating eight different regional scenarios describing
postlarval supply, we investigated whether differences in the spatio-temporal
delivery of postlarvae to the Florida Keys alters recruitment of subadult
lobsters. Our results indicate that random geographical variation in
postlarval supply yields the highest predicted recruitment, whereas
persistently patchy settlement yields the lowest. Field observations of
postlarval supply suggest that the random model is the most realistic. In
separate simulations, we determined the sensitivity of the model to changes in
the geographic arrangement of nursery habitat and the spatial resolution of
habitat structure. The most spatially explicit depictions of habitat structure
yielded small, but marginally significant differences in lobster recruitment
as compared with more generalized spatial scenarios. These differences may
well be magnified when more detailed depictions of postlarval settlement are
implemented in the model.
Subject
Ecology,Aquatic Science,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics,Oceanography
Cited by
18 articles.
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