4.7 Article

Coast-wide recruitment dynamics of Olympia oysters reveal limited synchrony and multiple predictors of failure

期刊

ECOLOGY
卷 97, 期 12, 页码 3503-3516

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ecy.1602

关键词

biogeography; bivalves; conservation; population cycles; population ecology; regional studies; restoration

类别

资金

  1. David H. Smith Research Conservation Fellowship
  2. NOAA Coastal Zone Management Administration Award
  3. Environmental Protection Agency's Puget Sound Partnership
  4. Taylor Shellfish Company
  5. Puget Sound Restoration Fund
  6. Andrew W. Mellon Foundation
  7. Washington Sea [R/LME-3]
  8. California Sea Grant
  9. UC EIPD Program
  10. Ocean Sciences Trust
  11. Point Reyes National Seashore
  12. UC Marine Council Fellowship
  13. Bodega Marine Laboratory
  14. NSF-UMEB [0102614, 0602922]
  15. CSU Fullerton Faculty-Undergraduate Student Support Initiative
  16. CSU Fullerton General Faculty Research Award
  17. Div Of Biological Infrastructure
  18. Direct For Biological Sciences [0102614, 0602922] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Recruitment of new propagules into a population can be a critical determinant of adult density. We examined recruitment dynamics in the Olympia oyster (Ostrea lurida), a species occurring almost entirely in estuaries. We investigated spatial scales of interannual synchrony across 37 sites in eight estuaries along 2,500km of Pacific North American coastline, predicting that high vs. low recruitment years would coincide among neighboring estuaries due to shared exposure to regional oceanographic factors. Such synchrony in recruitment has been found for many marine species and some migratory estuarine species, but has never been examined across estuaries in a species that can complete its entire life cycle within the same estuary. To inform ongoing restoration efforts for Olympia oysters, which have declined in abundance in many estuaries, we also investigated predictors of recruitment failure. We found striking contrasts in absolute recruitment rate and frequency of recruitment failure among sites, estuaries, and years. Although we found a positive relationship between upwelling and recruitment, there was little evidence of synchrony in recruitment among estuaries along the coast, and only limited synchrony of sites within estuaries, suggesting recruitment rates are affected more strongly by local dynamics within estuaries than by regional oceanographic factors operating at scales encompassing multiple estuaries. This highlights the importance of local wetland and watershed management for the demography of oysters, and perhaps other species that can complete their entire life cycle within estuaries. Estuaries with more homogeneous environmental conditions had greater synchrony among sites, and this led to the potential for estuary-wide failure when all sites had no recruitment in the same year. Environmental heterogeneity within estuaries may thus buffer against estuary-wide recruitment failure, analogous to the portfolio effect for diversity. Recruitment failure was correlated with lower summer water temperature, higher winter salinity, and shorter residence time: all indicators of stronger marine influence on estuaries. Recruitment failure was also more common in estuaries with limited networks of nearby adult oysters. Large existing oyster networks are thus of high conservation value, while estuaries that lack them would benefit from restoration efforts to increase the extent and connectivity of sites supporting oysters.

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