Department of Biology, University of Hawaii at Manoa, Honolulu, Hawaii, United States of America.
Department of Biology, Bowdoin College, Brunswick, Maine, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2024 Oct 24;19(10):e0312593. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0312593. eCollection 2024.
Several recent high intensity ENSO events have caused strong negative impacts on the adult phases of foundational species in coral reef ecosystems, but comparatively little is known about how climatic variables related to recent ENSOs are impacting the supply of larvae to benthic populations. In marine fishes and invertebrates, reproductive adults and planktonic larvae are generally more sensitive to environmental variability than older, non-reproductive adults. Further, the transport of larvae in ocean currents may also be strongly ENSO dependent. The interactions between the dynamics of larval survivorship and larval transport could lead to population bottlenecks as stronger ENSO events become more common. We tested the predictions of this hypothesis around the Main Hawaiian Islands (MHI) by constructing a correlation matrix of physical and biological time series variables that spanned 11 years (2007-2017) and multiple ENSO events. Our correlation matrix included four types of variables: i. published ENSO indices, ii. satellite-derived sea surface temperature (SST) and chlorophyll variables, iii. abundance and diversity of larval fishes sampled during the late winter spawning season off Oahu, and iv. abundance and diversity of coral reef fish recruits sampled on the western shore of the Big Island of Hawaii. We found that the abundance and diversity of larval fishes was negatively correlated with the Multivariate El Niño Index (MEI), and that larval variables were positively correlated with measures of fall recruitment (September & November), but not correlated with spring-summer recruitment (May & July). In the MHI, SST variables were not correlated with the MEI, but two successive El Niño events of 2014-15 and 2015-2016 were characterized by SST maxima approaching 30°C. Two large pulses of benthic recruitment occurred in the 2009 and 2014 recruitment seasons, with > 8000 recruits observed by divers over the summer and fall months. Both events were characterized by either neutral or negative MEI indices measured during the preceding winter months. These patterns suggest that La Niña and the neutral phases of the ENSO cycle are generally favorable for adult reproduction and larval development in the spring and summer, while El Niño phases may limit recruitment in the late summer and fall. We hypothesize that episodic recruitment during non-El Niño phases is related to favorable survivorship and transport dynamics that are associated with the formation of pairs of anticyclonic and cyclonic eddies on the leeward sides (western shores) of the Main Hawaiian Islands.
近年来,几次高强度的厄尔尼诺-南方涛动(ENSO)事件对珊瑚礁生态系统中基础物种的成体阶段造成了强烈的负面影响,但人们对与最近的 ENSO 相关的气候变量如何影响底栖种群幼虫供应知之甚少。在海洋鱼类和无脊椎动物中,生殖成体和浮游幼虫通常比年老的、非生殖的成体对环境变化更为敏感。此外,幼虫在海流中的运输也可能强烈依赖于 ENSO。幼虫存活率和幼虫运输的相互作用可能导致种群瓶颈,因为更强的 ENSO 事件变得更加普遍。我们通过构建一个跨越 11 年(2007-2017 年)和多个 ENSO 事件的物理和生物时间序列变量的相关矩阵,围绕夏威夷群岛主岛(MHI)测试了这一假设的预测。我们的相关矩阵包括四种类型的变量:i. 已发表的 ENSO 指数,ii. 卫星衍生的海面温度(SST)和叶绿素变量,iii. 在瓦胡岛冬季繁殖季节后期采样的幼虫鱼类的丰度和多样性,以及 iv. 在夏威夷大岛西海岸采样的珊瑚礁鱼类幼体的丰度和多样性。我们发现,幼虫鱼类的丰度和多样性与多变量厄尔尼诺指数(MEI)呈负相关,并且幼虫变量与秋季(9 月和 11 月)的招募呈正相关,但与春季-夏季的招募(5 月和 7 月)不相关。在 MHI 中,SST 变量与 MEI 不相关,但 2014-15 年和 2015-2016 年的两个连续厄尔尼诺事件的特点是 SST 最大值接近 30°C。2009 年和 2014 年的两次大型底栖招募事件中,潜水员在夏季和秋季观察到超过 8000 名新兵。这两个事件的特点是在前一个冬季月份测量的 MEI 指数均为中性或负值。这些模式表明,拉尼娜现象和 ENSO 周期的中性阶段通常有利于春季和夏季的成体繁殖和幼虫发育,而厄尔尼诺现象阶段可能会限制夏季和秋季的招募。我们假设,非厄尔尼诺现象阶段的偶发性招募与有利的生存和运输动态有关,这些动态与在夏威夷群岛下风侧(西海岸)形成对气旋和反气旋漩涡对有关。