Record Details

Spatial anatomy of species driven survival: Effects of predation and climate-driven environmental variability

ScholarsArchive at Oregon State University

Field Value
Title Spatial anatomy of species driven survival: Effects of predation and climate-driven environmental variability
Names Cianelli, Lorenzo (creator)
Dingsør, Gjert E. (creator)
Bogstad, Bjarte (creator)
Ottersen, Geir (creator)
Chan, Kung-sik (creator)
Gjøsæter, Harald (creator)
Stiansen, Jan Erik (creator)
Stenseth, Nils C. (creator)
Date Issued 2007-03 (iso8601)
Note Copyright by the Ecological Society of America.
Abstract The majority of survival analyses focus on temporal scales. Consequently, there
is a limited understanding of how species survival varies over space and, ultimately, how
spatial variability in the environment affects the temporal dynamics of species abundance.
Using data from the Barents Sea, we study the spatiotemporal variability of the juvenile
Atlantic cod (Gadus morhua) survival. We develop an index of spatial survival based on
changes of juvenile cod distribution through their first winter of life (from age-0 to age-1) and
study its variability in relation to biotic and abiotic factors. Over the 25 years analyzed (1980–
2004), we found that, once the effect of passive drift due to dominant currents is accounted
for, the area where age-0 cod survival was lowest coincided with the area of highest abundance
of older cod. Within this critical region, the survival of age-0 cod was negatively affected by its
own abundance, by that of older cod, and by bottom depth. Furthermore, during cold years,
age-0 cod survival increased in the eastern and coldest portion of the examined area, which
was typically avoided by older conspecifics. Based on these results we propose that within the
examined area top-down mechanisms and predation-driven density dependence can strongly
affect the spatial pattern of age-0 cod survival. Climate-related variables can also influence the
spatial survival of age-0 cod by affecting their distribution and that of their predators. Results
from these and similar studies, focusing on the spatial variability of survival rates, can be used
to characterize species habitat quality of marine renewable resources.
Genre Article
Topic Barents Sea
Identifier Cianelli, L., Dingsør, G. E., Bogstad, B., Ottersen, G., Chan, K., Gjøsæter, H., Stiansen, J. E., & Stenseth N. C. (2007). Spatial anatomy of species driven survival: Effects of predation and climate-driven environmental variability [Electronic version]. Ecology, 88(3), 635-646. doi:10.1890/05-2035

© Western Waters Digital Library - GWLA member projects - Designed by the J. Willard Marriott Library - Hosted by Oregon State University Libraries and Press