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Environmental variables influencing spatial and temporal patterns of fish spawning and recruitment

ABSTRACT Spawning times and spawning intensity during the life cycles of some fish species found off South Africa and Norway were synthesized using data collected from the literature. The comparison of temporal patterns in spawning of South African fish species showed variable spawning times and int...

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Main Author: Mbatha, Fisokuhle Lungile
Other Authors: Moloney, Coleen L
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Marine Research (MA-RE) Institute 2017
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access_status_str Open Access
author Mbatha, Fisokuhle Lungile
author2 Moloney, Coleen L
author_browse Mbatha, Fisokuhle Lungile
Moloney, Coleen L
author_facet Moloney, Coleen L
Mbatha, Fisokuhle Lungile
author_sort Mbatha, Fisokuhle Lungile
collection Thesis
description ABSTRACT Spawning times and spawning intensity during the life cycles of some fish species found off South Africa and Norway were synthesized using data collected from the literature. The comparison of temporal patterns in spawning of South African fish species showed variable spawning times and intensity depending on the environmental conditions within that spawning habitat. Their spawning migration durations were suggested to be short since they inhabit a dynamic coastal upwelling ecosystem with intra-seasonal differences caused by changes in upwelling strength enhanced by south-easterly winds, nutrient-limited waters on the spawning grounds and stable thermal conditions. This contrasts with Norwegian fish species, which showed patterns of spawning times and durations that are restricted and confined to spring (February – May), probably due to strong, consistent seasonality, depending on primary production. This explains the inter-annual differences observed in their spawning periods, where strong south-westerly winds (downwelling), light intensity and salinity stratification could influence long spawning migrations. For Cape hakes, environmental variability influencing recruitment was further investigated on the west coast nursery grounds of the southern Benguela, particularly for deep-water Cape hake (Merluccius paradoxus). Biophysical characteristics of the west coast nursery grounds were assessed in relation to distribution of deep-water Cape hake juveniles (< 15 cm) using physical data (CTD, alongshore wind speed anomalies) and biological data (abundance/density of hake juveniles, recruitment estimates). Distinct spatial patterns of hake distribution were evident in relation to near-bottom environmental factors (temperature, salinity and oxygen). Nansen surveys conducted from 2003 – 2013 during summer (January – February) showed greater abundance of hake juveniles over the Orange Banks than in other nursery areas. The hake juveniles occurred in mid-shelf waters with oxygen depletion (2 – 3 mL O₂.L⁻¹) and hypoxic conditions (< 2 mL O₂.L⁻¹) and temperature ranges of 7 – 11 ⁰C. Salinity appeared to have less influence on hake juveniles' distribution. During spring surveys, hake catches were reduced on all nursery grounds except near Cape Columbine. There was a strong positive correlation between deep-water Cape hake recruitment indices and summer wind speed anomalies for the same year (Lag = 0 year) and with autumn wind speed anomalies of the previous year (Lag = 1 year). The relationship between winds and near-bottom oxygen concentrations on the Orange Banks is unclear and needs to be investigated.
format Thesis
id oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/25402
institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:32:37.404Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2017
publishDateRange 2017
publishDateSort 2017
publisher Marine Research (MA-RE) Institute
publisherStr Marine Research (MA-RE) Institute
record_format dspace
source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/25402 Environmental variables influencing spatial and temporal patterns of fish spawning and recruitment Mbatha, Fisokuhle Lungile Moloney, Coleen L Ostrowski, Marek Lipinski, Marek Applied Marine Science ABSTRACT Spawning times and spawning intensity during the life cycles of some fish species found off South Africa and Norway were synthesized using data collected from the literature. The comparison of temporal patterns in spawning of South African fish species showed variable spawning times and intensity depending on the environmental conditions within that spawning habitat. Their spawning migration durations were suggested to be short since they inhabit a dynamic coastal upwelling ecosystem with intra-seasonal differences caused by changes in upwelling strength enhanced by south-easterly winds, nutrient-limited waters on the spawning grounds and stable thermal conditions. This contrasts with Norwegian fish species, which showed patterns of spawning times and durations that are restricted and confined to spring (February – May), probably due to strong, consistent seasonality, depending on primary production. This explains the inter-annual differences observed in their spawning periods, where strong south-westerly winds (downwelling), light intensity and salinity stratification could influence long spawning migrations. For Cape hakes, environmental variability influencing recruitment was further investigated on the west coast nursery grounds of the southern Benguela, particularly for deep-water Cape hake (Merluccius paradoxus). Biophysical characteristics of the west coast nursery grounds were assessed in relation to distribution of deep-water Cape hake juveniles (< 15 cm) using physical data (CTD, alongshore wind speed anomalies) and biological data (abundance/density of hake juveniles, recruitment estimates). Distinct spatial patterns of hake distribution were evident in relation to near-bottom environmental factors (temperature, salinity and oxygen). Nansen surveys conducted from 2003 – 2013 during summer (January – February) showed greater abundance of hake juveniles over the Orange Banks than in other nursery areas. The hake juveniles occurred in mid-shelf waters with oxygen depletion (2 – 3 mL O₂.L⁻¹) and hypoxic conditions (< 2 mL O₂.L⁻¹) and temperature ranges of 7 – 11 ⁰C. Salinity appeared to have less influence on hake juveniles' distribution. During spring surveys, hake catches were reduced on all nursery grounds except near Cape Columbine. There was a strong positive correlation between deep-water Cape hake recruitment indices and summer wind speed anomalies for the same year (Lag = 0 year) and with autumn wind speed anomalies of the previous year (Lag = 1 year). The relationship between winds and near-bottom oxygen concentrations on the Orange Banks is unclear and needs to be investigated. 2017-09-26T14:55:19Z 2017-09-26T14:55:19Z 2017 Master Thesis Masters MSc http://hdl.handle.net/11427/25402 eng application/pdf Marine Research (MA-RE) Institute Faculty of Science University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Applied Marine Science
Mbatha, Fisokuhle Lungile
Environmental variables influencing spatial and temporal patterns of fish spawning and recruitment
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Environmental variables influencing spatial and temporal patterns of fish spawning and recruitment
title_full Environmental variables influencing spatial and temporal patterns of fish spawning and recruitment
title_fullStr Environmental variables influencing spatial and temporal patterns of fish spawning and recruitment
title_full_unstemmed Environmental variables influencing spatial and temporal patterns of fish spawning and recruitment
title_short Environmental variables influencing spatial and temporal patterns of fish spawning and recruitment
title_sort environmental variables influencing spatial and temporal patterns of fish spawning and recruitment
topic Applied Marine Science
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/25402
work_keys_str_mv AT mbathafisokuhlelungile environmentalvariablesinfluencingspatialandtemporalpatternsoffishspawningandrecruitment