Authors
Jamison M Gove, Jonathan L Whitney, Margaret A McManus, Joey Lecky, Felipe C Carvalho, Jennifer M Lynch, Jiwei Li, Philipp Neubauer, Katharine A Smith, Jana E Phipps, Donald R Kobayashi, Karla B Balagso, Emily A Contreras, Mark E Manuel, Mark A Merrifield, Jeffrey J Polovina, Gregory P Asner, Jeffrey A Maynard, Gareth J Williams
Publication date
2019/11/26
Journal
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Volume
116
Issue
48
Pages
24143-24149
Publisher
National Academy of Sciences
Description
Life for many of the world’s marine fish begins at the ocean surface. Ocean conditions dictate food availability and govern survivorship, yet little is known about the habitat preferences of larval fish during this highly vulnerable life-history stage. Here we show that surface slicks, a ubiquitous coastal ocean convergence feature, are important nurseries for larval fish from many ocean habitats at ecosystem scales. Slicks had higher densities of marine phytoplankton (1.7-fold), zooplankton (larval fish prey; 3.7-fold), and larval fish (8.1-fold) than nearby ambient waters across our study region in Hawai‘i. Slicks contained larger, more well-developed individuals with competent swimming abilities compared to ambient waters, suggesting a physiological benefit to increased prey resources. Slicks also disproportionately accumulated prey-size plastics, resulting in a 60-fold higher ratio of plastics to larval fish prey than nearby …
Total citations
202020212022202320242435373321
Scholar articles
JM Gove, JL Whitney, MA McManus, J Lecky… - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2019