Seasonal forecasting of mussel aquaculture meat yield in the Pelorus Sound
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Published:2023-05-31
Issue:
Volume:10
Page:
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ISSN:2296-7745
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Container-title:Frontiers in Marine Science
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language:
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Short-container-title:Front. Mar. Sci.
Author:
Rampal Neelesh,Broekhuizen Niall,Plew David,Zeldis John,Noll Ben,Meyers Tristan,Whitehead Amy L.,Fauchereau Nicolas,Stenton-Dozey Jeanie
Abstract
This study develops a novel approach to forecasting anomalies of meat yield from mussel aquaculture in Pelorus Sound, New Zealand, based on the relationships between non-local sea surface temperature (SST) and observations of mussel meat yield over 13 years. Overall, we found strong associations between lagged SSTs in the Tasman Sea region and mussel meat yield, with a noticeable seasonal cycle in these relationships. Results also showed that oceanic variables such as SST correlate more strongly with mussel meat yield than atmospheric variables, such as surface wind and other indices of atmospheric flow. The relationship between SST and mussel meat yield is linked to patterns of surface wind anomalies along the west coast of New Zealand. We identified regions where the SST was most correlated with mussel meat yield anomalies for each season and derived empirical relationships from linear regression. We then applied these empirical relationships to seasonal forecasts of SST from the European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts to generate seasonal forecasts of mussel meat yield. By validating our mussel meat yield forecasts from 13 years of retrospective forecasts, we find significant skill at lead times of up to 3 months in December–February and 5 months in September–November. During March-August forecasts are only skillful at a lead-time of 1 month. The results of this study have the potential to improve the accuracy and reliability of mussel meat yield forecasts and to provide valuable insights for the mussel industry.
Funder
Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment
Publisher
Frontiers Media SA
Subject
Ocean Engineering,Water Science and Technology,Aquatic Science,Global and Planetary Change,Oceanography