Spatially dynamic maternal control of migratory fish recruitment pulses triggered by shifting seasonal cues

Allbwn ymchwil: Cyfraniad at gyfnodolynErthygladolygiad gan gymheiriaid

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Spatially dynamic maternal control of migratory fish recruitment pulses triggered by shifting seasonal cues. / Goto, Daisuke; Hamel, Martin J.; Pegg, Mark A. et al.
Yn: Mar. Freshwater Res., Cyfrol 69, Rhif 6, 08.03.2018, t. 942-961.

Allbwn ymchwil: Cyfraniad at gyfnodolynErthygladolygiad gan gymheiriaid

HarvardHarvard

Goto, D, Hamel, MJ, Pegg, MA, Hammen, JJ, Rugg, ML & Forbes, VE 2018, 'Spatially dynamic maternal control of migratory fish recruitment pulses triggered by shifting seasonal cues', Mar. Freshwater Res., cyfrol. 69, rhif 6, tt. 942-961. https://doi.org/10.1071/MF17082

APA

Goto, D., Hamel, M. J., Pegg, M. A., Hammen, J. J., Rugg, M. L., & Forbes, V. E. (2018). Spatially dynamic maternal control of migratory fish recruitment pulses triggered by shifting seasonal cues. Mar. Freshwater Res., 69(6), 942-961. https://doi.org/10.1071/MF17082

CBE

Goto D, Hamel MJ, Pegg MA, Hammen JJ, Rugg ML, Forbes VE. 2018. Spatially dynamic maternal control of migratory fish recruitment pulses triggered by shifting seasonal cues. Mar. Freshwater Res. 69(6):942-961. https://doi.org/10.1071/MF17082

MLA

VancouverVancouver

Goto D, Hamel MJ, Pegg MA, Hammen JJ, Rugg ML, Forbes VE. Spatially dynamic maternal control of migratory fish recruitment pulses triggered by shifting seasonal cues. Mar. Freshwater Res. 2018 Maw 8;69(6):942-961. doi: 10.1071/MF17082

Author

Goto, Daisuke ; Hamel, Martin J. ; Pegg, Mark A. et al. / Spatially dynamic maternal control of migratory fish recruitment pulses triggered by shifting seasonal cues. Yn: Mar. Freshwater Res. 2018 ; Cyfrol 69, Rhif 6. tt. 942-961.

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Spatially dynamic maternal control of migratory fish recruitment pulses triggered by shifting seasonal cues

AU - Goto, Daisuke

AU - Hamel, Martin J.

AU - Pegg, Mark A.

AU - Hammen, Jeremy J.

AU - Rugg, Matthew L.

AU - Forbes, Valery E.

PY - 2018/3/8

Y1 - 2018/3/8

N2 - Environmental regimes set the timing and location of early life-history events of migratory species with synchronised reproduction. However, modified habitats in human-dominated landscapes may amplify uncertainty in predicting recruitment pulses, impeding efforts to restore habitats invaluable to endemic species. The present study assessed how environmental and spawner influences modulate recruitment variability and persistence of the Missouri River shovelnose sturgeon (Scaphirhynchus platorynchus) under modified seasonal spawning and nursery habitat conditions. Using a spatially explicit individual-based biophysical model, spawning cycle, early life-history processes (dispersal, energetics and survival) and prey production were simulated under incrementally perturbed flow (from –10 to –30%) and temperature (+1 and +2°C) regimes over 50 years. Simulated flow reduction and warming synergistically contracted spring spawning habitats (by up to 51%) and periods (by 19%). Under these conditions, fewer mature females entered a reproductive cycle, and more females skipped spawning, reducing spawning biomass by 20–50%. Many spawners migrated further to avoid increasingly unfavourable habitats, intensifying local density dependence in larval stages and, in turn, increasing size-dependent predation mortality. Diminished egg production (by 20–97%) and weakened recruitment pulses (by 46–95%) ultimately reduced population size by 21–74%. These simulations illustrate that environmentally amplified maternal influences on early life histories can lower sturgeon population stability and resilience to ever-increasing perturbations.

AB - Environmental regimes set the timing and location of early life-history events of migratory species with synchronised reproduction. However, modified habitats in human-dominated landscapes may amplify uncertainty in predicting recruitment pulses, impeding efforts to restore habitats invaluable to endemic species. The present study assessed how environmental and spawner influences modulate recruitment variability and persistence of the Missouri River shovelnose sturgeon (Scaphirhynchus platorynchus) under modified seasonal spawning and nursery habitat conditions. Using a spatially explicit individual-based biophysical model, spawning cycle, early life-history processes (dispersal, energetics and survival) and prey production were simulated under incrementally perturbed flow (from –10 to –30%) and temperature (+1 and +2°C) regimes over 50 years. Simulated flow reduction and warming synergistically contracted spring spawning habitats (by up to 51%) and periods (by 19%). Under these conditions, fewer mature females entered a reproductive cycle, and more females skipped spawning, reducing spawning biomass by 20–50%. Many spawners migrated further to avoid increasingly unfavourable habitats, intensifying local density dependence in larval stages and, in turn, increasing size-dependent predation mortality. Diminished egg production (by 20–97%) and weakened recruitment pulses (by 46–95%) ultimately reduced population size by 21–74%. These simulations illustrate that environmentally amplified maternal influences on early life histories can lower sturgeon population stability and resilience to ever-increasing perturbations.

U2 - 10.1071/MF17082

DO - 10.1071/MF17082

M3 - Article

VL - 69

SP - 942

EP - 961

JO - Mar. Freshwater Res.

JF - Mar. Freshwater Res.

IS - 6

ER -