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1296 The influence of midwater hypoxia on nekton vertical migration Sandra L. Parker-Stetter, John K. Horne, and Mariko M. Langness Parker-Stetter, S. L., Horne, J. K., and Langness, M. M. 2009. The influence of midwater hypoxia on nekton vertical migration. – ICES Journal of Marine Science, 66: 1296– 1302. Hypoxia affects pelagic nekton, fish and large zooplankton, distributions in marine and fresh-water ecosystems. Bottom hypoxia is common, but midwater oxygen minimum layers (OMLs) may also affect nekton that undergo diel vertical migration (DVM). This study examined the response of pelagic nekton to an OML in a temperate fjord (Hood Canal, WA, USA). A 2006 study suggested that the OML created a prey refuge for zooplankton. Using acoustics (38 and 120 kHz), the 2007 night DVM patterns of nekton were quantified before (June, August) and during (September) an OML. All months had similar precrepuscular distributions (.50-m depth) of fish and invertebrates. During the September evening crepuscular period, a zooplankton layer migrated upwards (.1.5 m min21), but the layer’s rate of ascent slowed to ,0.5 m min21 when it reached the lower edge of the OML. The bottom edge of the layer then moved below the OML and remained there for 13 minutes before moving through the OML at .1.0 m min21. As in June and August, fish in September followed the upward migration of the zooplankton layer to the surface, crossing through the OML. Our results suggest that the 2007 OML did not affect zooplankton or fish vertical distributions. Keywords: acoustics, diel vertical migration, fish, hypoxia, zooplankton. Received 8 August 2008; accepted 17 November 2008; advance access publication 10 February 2009. S. L. Parker-Stetter, J. K. Horne and M. M. Langness: School of Aquatic and Fishery Sciences, University of Washington, Seattle, WA 98195-5020, USA. Correspondence to S. L. Parker-Stetter: tel: þ1 206 221 5459; fax: þ1 206 221 6939; e-mail: [email protected]. Introduction Diel vertical migration (DVM) is a common ecological strategy for both fish and zooplankton. Whether undergoing DVM for feeding, predator avoidance, or to maximize energetic efficiency (Hays, 2003; Scheuerell and Schindler, 2003; Mehner et al., 2007), organisms may migrate through hundreds of metres of water (Pearcy et al., 1977; Heywood, 1996; Herring et al., 1998) that differ in oceanographic properties. Based on biological tolerances, fish and zooplankton may alter their vertical or horizontal distributions or both features at the same time relative to water conditions (Andersen et al., 1997; Keister et al., 2000; Craig and Crowder, 2005). Dissolved oxygen (DO) is one oceanographic property that may differentially influence migration patterns. DO affects fish and zooplankton distributions in marine, estuarine fresh-water systems throughout the world (Marcus, 2001; Pollock et al., 2007). As a result, responses by a wide variety of organisms to low DO conditions are well studied. Some species of fish and zooplankton are highly tolerant of low DO, remaining in hypoxic waters during all or some portion of their DVM cycle (e.g. Wishner et al., 2000; Butler et al., 2001; De Robertis et al., 2001). In contrast, some pelagic fish and zooplankton species shift their distribution vertically or horizontally (e.g. Keister et al., 2000) into water with higher DO but suboptimal thermal or salinity characteristics (e.g. Fry, 1937; Horppila et al., 2000). Differences in predator and prey responses to low DO may affect both DVM and the resulting transfer of energy in aquatic systems. If predators and prey are both intolerant of hypoxic conditions, the two may be constrained to a smaller, shared region of the water column and result in high mortality of prey (Prince and Goodyear, 2006). When prey, but not predators, are tolerant of hypoxic conditions, a low DO refuge may form that reduces prey mortality (e.g. Klumb et al., 2004). Such a refuge may sometimes facilitate a complex coexistence of predators that feed on a common prey species during DVM (Horppila et al., 2000). Monitoring fish and zooplankton distributions may provide a proxy index for environmental health by identifying potential shifts in trophic transfer in episodically or chronically oxygenstressed systems. Hood Canal (WA, USA, Figure 1) is a temperate fjord that has historically experienced low DO in bottom waters and the development of a midwater oxygen minimum layer (OML) during autumn (Newton et al., 1995). An increased occurrence of fish kills, and uncertainty about ecological disruptions as a result of low DO, has led to fishery closures (Bargmann, 2003). A day/ night study in Hood Canal in 2006 suggested that the OML might influence predator–prey dynamics by restricting the vertical extent of fish, but not zooplankton, night-time vertical migration (referred to as DVM in this paper; Figure 2). The present study was undertaken to examine the dynamics and potential effects of low DO on the DVM of zooplankton and fish. Specific objectives were to characterize zooplankton evening crepuscular, i.e. +45 minutes from sunset, approximately civil twilight, vertical migration, and assess the concurrent vertical distribution of fish before and after the development of an OML. Methods Study site Hood Canal (478350 000 N, 1228550 000 W) is located in Puget Sound, WA, USA (Figure 1). Water exchange is limited by a shallow sill (45 m) that precedes a deep channel (120 –180 m). The residence # 2009 International Council for the Exploration of the Sea. Published by Oxford Journals. All rights reserved. For Permissions, please email: [email protected] 1297 Nekton vertical migration and midwater hypoxia Figure 1. Map of Hoodsport study site in Hood Canal, WA, USA. The shallow sill is located in the immediate northeast corner of the map. The inset map displays the study-site location on the North American west coast. The night-time survey grid is shown as an expansion. Evening crepuscular sampling was at the centre of the survey grid. time of water in Hood Canal ranges from 40 d during summer to 250 d during winter (Babson et al., 2006). long), with hull-mounted, 38- and 120-kHz, Simrad split-beam transducers (ES 38-12, 128 3 dB beam width, 1000 W input power; ES 120-7C, 78 3 dB beam width, 500 W input power) operated with Simrad ES60 transceivers, was used during June and September. In August, 38- and 120-kHz, split-beam, Simrad transducers (ES 38-12, 128 3 dB beam width, 1000 W input power; ES 120-7C, 78 3 dB beam width, 500 W input power) operated with Simrad EK60 transceivers were deployed on a towed body from the RV “Mackinaw” (7 m long). All transceivers were operated at 2 pings s21 and 0.512 ms pulse duration. A 500 m500 m sampling grid (Figure 1) was surveyed .1.5 h before and after sunset to provide day and night characterizations of zooplankton and fish distributions. Daytime data are not presented in this paper. During the evening crepuscular period, the vessel anchored or drifted at the centre of the grid to record changes in vertical distributions. Oceanographic data were collected by deploying a Conductivity– Temperature–Depth (CTD) sensor (Seabird Seacat 19þ) from the vessel (September) or an Oceanic Remote Chemical–Optical Analyser mooring (ORCA; Dunne et al., 2002) located in the study grid (June, August). Oceanographic profiles for temperature, salinity, and DO were recorded within three hours of crepuscular sampling. A light-intensity logger (Onset Computer Corporation, Hobo-LI) was deployed on the bow of the vessel, just above the waterline, to provide optical data for crepuscular analyses. These data were smoothed with a super-smooth function that used local cross-validation in the fit (Friedman, 1984). Data collection Acoustic data were collected on 11 June, 2 August, and 11 September 2007 at Hoodsport in Hood Canal (Figure 1). Two vessels were used for the purpose. The RV “Centennial” (18 m Acoustic data processing The systematic variation in ES60 echosounder data (June, September) was removed using the ES60adjust program (Keith Figure 2. Hoodsport September 2006 (a) day (.2 h before sunset) and (b) night (.2 h after sunset), modified from Parker-Stetter and Horne (2009). (i) DO profile with 2 mg l21 hypoxia value marked as a horizontal black dashed line, (ii) 38 kHz echogram image with bottom shown as lower black region, (iii) % depth distribution of 38 kHz backscatter [NASC (sA), m2 nautical mile22], and (iv) individual fish distribution from 38 kHz data (target strength, dB re 1 m2). 1298 et al., 2005). Acoustic data were processed with Echoview 4.40.64.11098 (Myriax Pty Ltd, 2008). Transducer parameters (gain, Sa correction) were based on on-axis calibrations done before (September) or after (June, August) the acoustic surveys. Sound speed and absorption were calculated from the CTD or ORCA oceanographic data collected during the survey. Vessel noise in the mean volume-backscattering (Sv) data (38 kHz ¼ 2125 dB re 1 m21, 120 kHz ¼ 2130 dB re 1 m21) was removed by linear subtraction. Sv noise estimates were projected into the 40 log r TS domain and removed by linear subtraction. The sounder-detected bottom was examined, corrected as needed, and a 0.5-m backstep buffer was applied. The top 5 m of the water column was ignored to avoid transducer saturation and inclusion of near-surface bubbles. Noise within the water column, e.g. when passing over the anchor line or dropped data pings, was removed manually. Fish were classified using a 256 dB re 1 m2 TS minimum threshold in both the 38 kHz Sv and TS data. This threshold was based on the expected TS (Traynor, 1996) of the smallest fish captured, a 4-cm Pacific hake Merluccius productus, during the June and September midwater trawling. No maximum fish-TS threshold was applied to the data. Fish data were exported in 1 min horizontal by 5 m vertical bins. For zooplankton classification, a 277 dB minimum Sv threshold was applied to the 120 kHz data. This threshold was the expected Sv from the lowest density of zooplankton (2000 m23) found during 253-mm vertical net tows in July and September (MML, unpublished data). As these tows were dominated by calanoid copepods (.75% by number Paracalanus parvus and Calanus pacificus, MML, unpublished data), a TS of 2110 dB (Stanton and Chu, 2000) was assumed for TS estimation. Values below the minimum threshold were assigned 2999 dB (0 in the linear domain, Myriax Pty Ltd, 2008). To remove fish from the zooplankton 120 kHz Sv data, the 38 kHz fish-TS data were used as a mask. To account for offsets in transducer location and sampling volumes, a 3 3 sample dilation (Myriax Pty Ltd, 2008) was used to physically expand fish echoes that exceeded the 38 kHz, 256 dB TS-minimum threshold. As masked-fish targets in the 120 kHz data were not zero values for zooplankton, masked-fish regions were excluded from zooplankton Sv calculations. If the zooplankton distribution was reasonably uniform within each of the abovementioned bins, excluding masked regions would not influence Sv estimates. The upper and lower edges of the zooplankton layer were defined on the 120 kHz Sv data using a combination of techniques. First, minimum and maximum layer depths were visually defined with an external buffer of +2 m. Data from this region were then extracted by 1 min horizontal and 1 m vertical bins. Upper- and lower-layer edges were defined for each 1-min-layer segment where zooplankton backscattering approximately doubled (Sv ¼ 2.5 –3 dB). The lower-layer edge depth was defined as the maximum depth of the 1 m cell (e.g. for 50 –51 m, 51 m is the designated depth), and the upper-layer edge depth was similarly defined as the minimum depth of the 1 m cell. Layer-edge definitions were plotted, anomalous points, e.g. inclusion of fish school remnants, were compared with the 120 kHz Sv echogram, and layer-edge definitions were adjusted for individual 1 min segments. The zooplankton upper- and lower-layer edges were smoothed to remove small variations that resulted from vessel motion, using a super-smooth function fitted to the data using local cross-validation (Friedman, 1984). S. L. Parker-Stetter et al. Fish and zooplankton distribution Fish distribution was characterized using 38 kHz Sv data. Fish Sv echograms were generated using Sv mean values for each 1 min horizontal by 5 m vertical bins. Zooplankton layer attributes were characterized using mean Sv, depth in the water column, migration rate, and layer thickness. A mean Sv was calculated for the upper- and lower-layer edges using all 1 min segments in each sampled month. The migration rate of the zooplankton layer (m min21) was calculated as the net change in the upper- or lower-edge depth between successive 1 min horizontal bins. Layer thickness was defined as the difference between upper- and lower-edge depths within each 1 min horizontal bin. Results The water column at Hoodsport was more stratified in August and September than in June. In all months, surface water (,6 m) had the highest temperature (11.6 –19.18C), highest DO (6.9– 11.3 mg l21), and lowest salinity (24.6–28.6 psu) values (Figure 3a–c). In June and August, the lowest DO (,2.2 mg l21) was near the bottom (.115 m, Figure 3a and b). In September, an OML had developed and the lowest DO level (1.7 mg l21) was at 22 m (Figure 3c). A small zone of low DO water (3.7 mg l21) was also observed midwater (18 m) in June (Figure 3a). There was no evidence of internal waves at any time. Light intensity decreased through the crepuscular period, with the maximum rate of light-intensity change from 22 to 27 min after sunset (Figure 3a–c). Zooplankton migrated from depths .75 m to depths ,10 m during all months. The greatest migration occurred in June, with the lower edge of the layer migrating from 106 to 16 m and the upper edge migrating from 84 to 7 m (Figure 3a). August and September had similar layer migration ranges, with the lower-layer edge migrating from 80 to 20 m and the upper edge from 50 to 7 m (Figure 3b and c), suggesting that the presence of the September OML (Figure 3c) did not influence layer-depth range. Mean Sv for upper and lower zooplankton layer edges were, respectively, 272.0 and 272.5 dB re 1 m21 in June, 280.3 and 282.2 dB re 1 m21 in August, and 274.6 and 274.4 dB re 1 m21 in September. Layer thickness was similar among months, but the timing of maximum thickness differed in September. Maximum layer thicknesses were between 23 and 31 m and the minima were between 9 and 16 m (Figure 3a–c). Changes in layer thickness during DVM for a given month ranged from 14 to 20 m. In June and August, maximum layer thickness was at the beginning of the survey at 57 min (June) and 63 min (August) before sunset, and decreased to a minimum at the end of the survey (97 and 46 min after sunset, Figure 3a and b). In September, maximum layer thickness was 17 min before sunset (Figure 3c), but there was another increase in thickness after sunset. In contrast to June and August, the zooplankton layer thickness decreased to 18 m at 51 min after sunset in September but then increased, eventually reaching 24 m at 65 min after sunset (Figure 3c). The initial increase in thickness at 52 min after sunset corresponded to the lower edge of the layer reaching the OML (Figure 3c). Migration rates for the zooplankton layer varied between 20.53 and 1.78 m min21 (Figure 3a –c). In all months, the highest migration rates were within 30 min of sunset (Figure 3a –c). In June, migration rates peaked 3 min after the maximum decrease in light intensity (Figure 3a) and 4– 7 min Nekton vertical migration and midwater hypoxia 1299 Figure 3. Oceanography (left panels) and acoustic data (right panels) for Hoodsport in (a) June, (b) August, and (c) September 2007. Left panel: DO (cyan), temperature (blue), and salinity (red) are plotted against depth. Right panel: zooplankton migration based on 120 kHz Sv backscatter (yellow to red lines, scale indicates rate of migration), fish acoustic backscatter (Sv) at 38 kHz (shaded white– green – blue, scale indicates backscatter intensity), and light intensity (black line) plotted against minutes from sunset (0 is sunset, negative values before, positive values after) and depth for Crepuscular data. Night illustrates the vertical fish distribution from 38 kHz Sv data, collected .100 min after sunset and averaged over the survey grid indicated in Figure 1, shown for comparison on the same depth scale. The bottom edge of the OML, the point of the greatest change in DO concentration, is indicated on the September figure (horizontal, thin black line). before the highest rate of decrease in light intensity in August and September (Figure 3b and c). After reaching their maxima, migration rates decreased as the layer continued to move towards the surface in June and August (Figure 3a and b). Whereas the upper-layer edge followed this pattern in September, the lower edge slowed to 0.02 m min21 at 51–52 min 1300 after sunset at a depth of 30 m, just inside the lower boundary of the OML (2.25 mg l21, Figure 3c). After entering the OML, the lower edge of the zooplankton layer had a 13-min period of downward migration (20.04 to 20.53 m min21, Figure 3c). At 65 min after sunset, the migration rate of the lower edge increased upwards, reaching 1.04 m min21 before decreasing as the layer approached the surface (Figure 3c). Fish vertical distribution during the crepuscular period tracked the DVM of zooplankton during each of the samples taken in June, August, and September, respectively. In all months, fish were distributed in pelagic- or surface-associated schools, or within a deep layer (Figure 3a–c). At the beginning of all surveys (45– 70 min before sunset), the deep layer of fish was present at depths .50 m (Figure 3a –c). In June, this layer began migrating coincidentally with the zooplankton, but was patchily distributed .50 m (Figure 3a). During the June night-time survey, by 127 minutes after sunset, fish were uniformly distributed between 30 m and the bottom, with intense pelagic- and surface-orientated schools present (Figure 3a). In August and September, the deep fish layer migrated coincidentally with the zooplankton layer (Figure 3b and c) and had reached the surface by the end of the crepuscular surveys (46 and 87 min after sunset in August and September, respectively). The presence of fish throughout the water column in August and September was confirmed by the night-time surveys (348 min after sunset in August, Figure 3b; 94 min after sunset in September, Figure 3c). Discussion The 2007 OML in Hood Canal may have affected the upward migration of zooplankton, but did not ultimately affect the night distributions of fish and zooplankton. This suggests that the potential prey refuge created by the OML in 2006 did not occur during the 2007 sampling. The formation of a low DO prey refuge in Hood Canal is probably a function of the intensity of the OML and organism-specific tolerance levels. The vertical extent, timing, and migration rates of zooplankton in this study agree with the results of other DVM studies. In Dabob Bay, a large bay within the Hood Canal, two calanoid copepods (Calanus pacificus and Metridia lucens) and an euphausiid (Euphausia pacifica) undergo regular DVM from depths .50 m into surface waters ,25 m (Bollens and Frost, 1991; Bollens et al., 1992; Dagg et al., 1998). As was also observed in the present study, ambient light levels are the dominant trigger for the onset of upward migration in copepods and euphausiids (e.g. Heywood, 1996; Liljebladh and Thomasson, 2001). Upwardmigration rates found in this study, up to 1.78 m min21, are within the range of DVM rates (0.48–3.2 m min21) measured for euphausiids, copepods, and amphipods in other marine systems (e.g. Wiebe et al., 1992; Heywood, 1996; Liljebladh and Thomasson, 2001). During upward migration, the lower edge of the zooplankton layer appeared to react to the OML by decreasing speed and moving downwards in the water column. The DO concentration at Hoodsport of 2.25 mg l21 exceeded the limit of 2.0 mg l21 for hypoxic water. Horppila et al. (2000) suggested that the gradient, not the DO concentration itself, may restrict the movement. As salinity, temperature, and light levels were stable at the depth of the zooplankton response, it is unlikely that these factors contributed to changes in ascent rate and direction. The apparent response of the lower but not the upper edge of the zooplankton layer to the OML may indicate that the layer S. L. Parker-Stetter et al. comprised multiple species or life stages of one zooplankton species with different oxygen sensitivities. Copepod life stages frequently occupy water with different oxygen levels during non-DVM periods, suggesting an oxygen preference (Wishner et al., 2000; Loick et al., 2005). However, many marine copepod species are capable of migrating into, out of, or through low-DO waters during DVM (Besiktepe, 2001; Koppelman and Weikert, 2005; Castro et al., 2007). Mutlu (2003) observed that during vertical migrations of Calanus euxinus into and out of a hypoxic zone, when the DO was ,0.5 mg l21, the copepods became torpid and their migration rate decreased. Within hypoxic water, C. euxinus migrated at rates of 0.49 m min21 (upwards) and 0.34 m min21 (downwards; Mutlu, 2003). These values are within the range observed when the lower zooplankton edge encountered the OML in this study. The presence of E. pacifica in midwater-trawl catches, despite being absent from zooplankton samples, provides circumstantial evidence that the zooplankton layer comprised multiple species. As euphausiids may adapt physiologically to hypoxic conditions (Childress and Seibel, 1998), euphausiid presence in the migrating zooplankton layer may have contributed to the different responses of the upper and lower edges. Fish distributions in Hood Canal at night extended into nearsurface waters, suggesting that the OML was not a barrier to DVM in September. Some studies have suggested that when an oxygen gradient is present, fish remain in waters with .4.0 to 4.5 mg l21 DO (Horppila et al., 2000; Eby and Crowder, 2002; Klumb et al., 2004). In contrast, other studies have found fish associated with DO levels of 1 –2 mg l21 during DVM and non-DVM periods (Butler et al., 2001; Bell and Eggleston, 2005; Cornejo and Koppelmann, 2006). Little is known about the DO tolerance of Pacific hake, the dominant fish in our midwater trawls (Parker-Stetter and Horne, 2009). Hamukuaya et al. (1998) suggested that juvenile Cape hake (Merluccius capensis) avoided waters with ,0.7 mg l21 DO. Jørgensen et al. (2007) hypothesized that DO levels of 1.1 –1.3 mg l21 may have decreased escapement of adult hake from trawls by reducing swimming performance. Results from the present study suggest that adult and juvenile hake crossed the oxygen gradient, beginning at 2.43 mg l21, at the base of the OML and traversed a 19 m layer of water with DO as low as 1.74 mg l21. In 2006, when fish DVM appeared to be constrained, DO levels were 1.48 mg l21 at the base of the OML and as low as 0.66 mg l21 in the middle of the OML (Parker-Stetter and Horne, 2009). As we can find no other explanation for differences in fish distributions at night between 2006 and 2007, we infer that DO levels within the OML exceeded Pacific hake tolerances in 2006, but not in 2007. Separation of zooplankton and fish within acoustic data was based on catches from non-closing gears. The use of opening – closing midwater and zooplankton nets could refine identification of DVM constituents. For zooplankton, an opening–closing net could identify the dominant species in the upper and lower edges of the layer and clarify the observed differences in migration rates and potential responses to the OML. Although results from this study suggest that vertical ascents were not disrupted by the OML, more precise identification of migrating fish and zooplankton may reveal that the various fish-age groups or zooplankton life stages respond differently to it. Trophic-energy transfer in September 2007 was probably unaffected by the OML. Despite the apparent response of zooplankton to the OML during DVM, the night survey suggested that fish and zooplankton overlapped vertically, making predation possible. Nekton vertical migration and midwater hypoxia In contrast, fish access to zooplankton prey was almost certainly limited by the OML in September 2006 (Parker-Stetter and Horne, 2009). The complex range of potential responses to an OML, coupled with variation in OML formation and strength, emphasizes the need to examine potential disruptions of trophic linkages as a result of low-DO refugia. Acknowledgements We thank Dan Hannafious and Sean Hildebrandt (Hood Canal Salmon Enhancement Group), Greg Bargmann and Debbie Farrer (Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife), and David Barbee and Cairistiona Anderson (University of Washington) for field assistance. Jeff Cordell and Nissa Ferm (University of Washington) are thanked for assistance with zooplankton samples. We also thank the captains and crews of the University of Washington RV “Centennial” and the FV “Memories”. Allan Devol and Wendi Ruef (School of Oceanography, University of Washington) are thanked for providing ORCA buoy data. Funding was provided by the Hood Canal Dissolved Oxygen Programme through a Naval Sea Systems Command contract #N00024-02-D-6602 task 50. References Andersen, V., Sardou, J., and Gasser, B. 1997. Macroplankton and micronekton in the northeast tropical Atlantic: abundance, community composition and vertical distribution in relation to different trophic environments. 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