Spatial structure of the meroplankton community along a Patagonian fjord - The role of changing freshwater inputs

Meerhoff, E.; Tapia, FJ; Castro, LR

Abstract

Freshwater inputs are major drivers of circulation, hydrographic structure, and productivity patterns along estuarine systems. We assessed the degree to which meroplankton community structure in the Baker/Martinez fjord complex (Chilean Patagonia, 47.5 degrees S) responds to spatial and temporal changes in hydrographic conditions driven by seasonal changes in Baker river outflow. Zooplankton and hydrographic measurements were conducted along the fjord in early spring (October) and late summer (February), when river outflow was minimal and maximal, respectively. Major meroplankton groups found on these surveys were larval barnacles, crabs, bivalves and gastropods. There was a clear change in community structure between October and February, explained by a switch in the numerically dominant group from barnacle to bivalve larvae. This change in community structure was related to changes in hydrographic structure along the fjord, which are mainly associated with seasonal changes in the Baker river outflow. A variance partition analysis showed no significant spatial trend that could account for the variation in meroplankton along the Martinez channel, whereas temporal variability and environmental variables accounted for 36.6% and 27.6% of the variance, respectively. When comparing meroplankton among the Baker and Martinez channels in October, changes in environmental variables explained 44.9% of total variance, whereas spatial variability accounted for 23.5%. Early and late-stage barnacle larvae (i.e. nauplii and cyprids) were more abundant in water with lower temperature, and higher dissolved oxygen and chlorophyll-a concentration, whereas bivalve larvae were more strongly associated to warmer waters. The seasonal shift in numerical dominance, from barnacle larvae in early spring to bivalve larvae in late summer, suggests that reproduction of these groups is triggered by substantially different sets of conditions, both in terms of hydrography and food availability. The analysis of a monthly zooplankton time series showed that barnacle nauplii were most abundant in spring, and one order of magnitude more abundant than cyprids. Larvae of decapods were most abundant in summer. (C) 2014 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

Más información

Título según WOS: Spatial structure of the meroplankton community along a Patagonian fjord - The role of changing freshwater inputs
Título según SCOPUS: Spatial structure of the meroplankton community along a Patagonian fjord - The role of changing freshwater inputs
Título de la Revista: PROGRESS IN OCEANOGRAPHY
Volumen: 129
Editorial: PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
Fecha de publicación: 2014
Página de inicio: 125
Página final: 135
Idioma: English
DOI:

10.1016/j.pocean.2014.05.015

Notas: ISI, SCOPUS