Abstract
Cross-frontal transport associated with upwelling conditions was responsible for modifying ichthyoplankton distributions across the inner continental shelf waters off the Chesapeake Bay during late August 1988. Two ichthyoplankton assemblages characteristic of the Chesapeake Bay plume and inner-continental shelf waters were defined using multivariate analysis. Members of the plume assemblage ( Anchoa spp., Menticirrhus spp., and Micropogonias undulatus) were not retained within the Chesapeake Bay plume, but were instead advected 60 km onto the shelf within a low-salinity water mass. A second assemblage, dominated by several shelf-spawned taxa including Etropus microstomus, Prionotus spp. and Centropristis striata was distributed across the shelf. Atlantic croaker, M. undulatus, previously thought to be shelf-spawned exhibited a length-frequency distribution that increased from inshore to offshore, and paralleled that of Anchoa spp. This cross-shelf distribution, and the abundance of small (<3.5 mm), pre-flexion larvae inshore suggests that M. undulatus spawned near the plume front and were subsequently transported offshore with the plume assemblage. A mechanism for rapid cross-frontal transport is described. These findings suggest that the transport and recruitment patterns previously described for this taxon in Chesapeake Bay need to be re-examined. Larval survival and recruitment success of shelf-spawned estuarine species, like M. undulatus, are likely tied to oceanographic conditions on the inner shelf related to upwelling and downwelling conditions and plume dynamics, rather than to simple, wind-driven recruitment mechanisms.
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