4.7 Article

Modeling Antarctic Krill Circumpolar Spawning Habitat Quality to Identify Regions With Potential to Support High Larval Production

Journal

GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH LETTERS
Volume 48, Issue 12, Pages -

Publisher

AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
DOI: 10.1029/2020GL091206

Keywords

Breeding habitat; connectivity; ecosystem modeling; Euphausia superba; management; Southern Ocean

Funding

  1. European H2020 International Cooperation project MESOPP [692173]
  2. Tasmania Graduate Research Scholarship
  3. Australian Research Council under DECRA [DE180100828]
  4. H2020 Societal Challenges Programme [692173] Funding Source: H2020 Societal Challenges Programme
  5. Australian Research Council [DE180100828] Funding Source: Australian Research Council

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The study identified high-quality spawning habitats of Antarctic krill in small-scale management units (SSMUs) around the Antarctic Peninsula, with low coverage in other regions reliant on external sources for population. Fishing in key spawning areas may have downstream impacts on management of SSMUs and the krill fishery.
Antarctic krill (krill) are important within Southern Ocean ecosystems and support an expanding fishery. Toward understanding krill's response to environmental change, it is necessary to identify regions that support high krill larval production (spawning habitat). We develop a mechanistic model combining thermal and food requirements for krill egg production, with predation pressure post-spawning, to predict regions of high-quality spawning habitat. We optimize our model regionally and generate circumpolar predictions of spawning habitat quality. Our results indicate the southwest Atlantic accounts for almost half of all predicted high-quality spawning habitat. Small-scale management units (SSMUs) around the Antarctic Peninsula had high coverage of high-quality spawning habitat. In contrast, the remaining SSMUs (except around South Georgia) were poorly covered, suggestive of population sinks reliant on input from external sources upstream. This implies strong potential for downstream impacts of fishing in key spawning areas, with implications for management of SSMUs and the krill fishery.

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