Journal
FISHERIES OCEANOGRAPHY
Volume 31, Issue 6, Pages 571-586Publisher
WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/fog.12607
Keywords
biophysical modeling; fisheries management; larval connectivity; Loop Current; recruitment processes; West Florida Shelf
Categories
Funding
- NOAA Fisheries
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Geopolitical fishery management boundaries often do not align with the ecological population structure of marine species, which poses challenges for their assessment and management. This study focuses on the red snapper, an iconic and heavily exploited species in the US Gulf of Mexico and the southeastern US Atlantic coast. It suggests that the Atlantic population of red snapper is partially sustained by offspring from the Gulf of Mexico, and effective management of the Gulf population may have important implications for sustainable harvest off the Atlantic coast.
Geopolitical fishery management boundaries are often misaligned with the ecological population structure of marine species, which presents challenges for assessment and management of these species. Red snapper, Lutjanus campechanus, is an iconic and heavily exploited species in both the US Gulf of Mexico and off the southeastern US Atlantic coast and is managed separately in the two jurisdictions. It is hypothesized that the Atlantic red snapper stock is sustained partially by larval subsidies from the Gulf of Mexico. Here we use a biophysical modeling approach to simulate recruitment of red snapper across the entire Southeastern US region, and quantify rates of larval exchange across management jurisdictions. The biophysical framework simulates realistic red snapper behaviors and traits with respect to spatial distribution and timing of spawning, larval vertical migration and pelagic larval duration, and settlement habitat. Our results suggest that areas of the West Florida Shelf south of Tampa Bay are important sources of larvae for the Atlantic population, supplying as much as one third of the recruitment during some years. Yet, contributions of Gulf-spawned red snapper to the Atlantic stock are highly dynamic given large variability in spatial and temporal patterns of red snapper recovery in each region. As such, effective management of the Gulf of Mexico red snapper stock, particularly the spawning population in southwest Florida, may have important consequences for the sustainable harvest of red snapper off the Atlantic coast.
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