Abstract

AbstractUnderstanding recruitment patterns of an exploited species is essential to predict changes in population dynamics and to improve its management and conservation. Temporal variability in recruitment of the edible stalked barnacle Pollicipes pollicipes was analyzed over a decade (consecutive annual recruitment seasons from 2007 to 2016) at a cape area located in the Canary‐Iberia Current Upwelling System (Cape of Sines, Southwestern Portugal), in terms of (1) the timing and length of the main recruitment season and (2) the variation in monthly and annual recruitment intensity and its relationship with several oceanographic variables. A longer recruitment season was detected, corresponding to approximately 9–10 months (June through either March or April of the following year, as in 2012, 2015, and 2016) in recent years, while a shorter recruitment season was detected between 2007 and 2010 (< 5 months, September–January in 2007 and July–December in 2010). Mean annual recruitment from 2012 to 2016 was about four times higher (ca. 43 recruits adult−1) than in the first 5 yr of the 10‐yr period (ca. 12 recruits adult−1). Correlation analyses between monthly recruitment and oceanographic variables revealed a significant positive correlation with sea surface temperature and a negative correlation with upwelling index. Results indicate a trend toward a longer recruitment season and a higher recruitment intensity in recent years (2012–2016), and a clear association between recruitment of P. pollicipes and both relaxation of upwelling and seawater warming.

Highlights

  • Recruitment might be affected by presettlement and postsettlement processes (Pineda et al 2009)

  • Several studies performed in the California Current Upwelling System have investigated the relation between acorn barnacle recruitment and upwelling, suggesting that larvae are carried away from shore during upwelling and transported shoreward during downwelling or upwelling relaxation (Roughgarden et al 1988; Farrell et al 1991; Roughgarden et al 1991), and that reversals of upwelling-driven alongshore currents (Dudas et al 2009) and upwelling fronts colliding with the shore (Woodson et al 2012) may enhance larval transport and settlement

  • We described the intra and interannual patterns of the monthly recruitment of P. pollicipes on conspecifics over 10 yr at a cape area in Southwestern (SW) Portugal, in the Canary-Iberia Current Upwelling System, and analyzed these patterns in relation to variability of several oceanographic variables

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Summary

Introduction

Recruitment might be affected by presettlement (larval pool dynamics and larval transport processes) and postsettlement processes (biological interactions, disturbances, larval experience, and larval production) (Pineda et al 2009). Studies on daily settlement of the stalked barnacle Pollicipes polymerus suggested that internal tidal bores were responsible for onshore transport of larvae (Pineda 1991, 1994).

Results
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