Climate variation and anchovy recruitment in the California Current: a cause-and-effect analysis of an end-to-end model simulation

Author:

Politikos DV12,Rose KA3,Curchitser EN1,Checkley DM4,Rykaczewski RR5,Fiechter J6

Affiliation:

1. Department of Environmental Sciences, Rutgers University, New Brunswick, NJ 08901, USA

2. Institute of Marine Biological Resources and Inland Waters, Hellenic Centre for Marine Research, 16452, Attica, Greece

3. University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science, Horn Point Laboratory, Cambridge, MD 21613, USA

4. Scripps Institution of Oceanography, University of California, San Diego, La Jolla, CA 92093, USA

5. Ecosystem Sciences Division, NOAA Pacific Islands Fisheries Science Center, Honolulu, HI, 96818-5007, USA

6. Ocean Sciences Department, University of California, Santa Cruz, CA 95064, USA

Abstract

Interannual and regime (decadal) scale changes in climate affect the spatial distribution and productivity of marine fish species in numerous ecosystems. We analyzed a historical simulation (1965-2000) from an end-to-end ecosystem model of anchovy population dynamics for the California Current System to untangle the effects of warm versus cool conditions on recruitment. A�3-dimensional coupled hydrodynamic-NPZD (nitrogen-phytoplankton-zooplankton-detritus) model (ROMS-NEMURO) provided the physical conditions (circulation, temperature) and 3 zooplankton concentrations as inputs to an anchovy full life cycle individual-based model (IBM). Our analysis was focused on isolating the effects of the well-documented El Niño Southern Oscillation signal and 3 climate regimes on spawning habitat, development, and survival of eggs and yolk-sac larvae, growth and survival of larvae and juveniles, and ultimately recruitment of anchovy. The major drivers of lowered recruitment success in warm years and in warmer regimes were reduced survival and growth rates of eggs and larvae that resulted from the poleward shift of adults in response to warmer temperatures prior to spawning. Three model-data comparisons showed the model deviated from empirically derived values of annual recruitment success but agreed with data for annual mean latitude of egg distributions and predicted larval consumption rates versus measured zooplankton concentrations. More effort is needed to improve certain biological aspects of the IBM so that it can replicate empirically estimated recruitment fluctuations. Overall, the altered responses of anchovy to changing climate in the California Current domain illustrate the benefit of the present mechanistic approach to infer how anchovy may respond under future ecosystem conditions.

Publisher

Inter-Research Science Center

Subject

Ecology,Aquatic Science,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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