Evaluating Energy Flows Through Jellyfish and Forage Fish and the Effects of Fishing on the Northern Humboldt Current Ecosystem

Luciano Chiaverano1, Kelly Lynn Robinson2, James J Ruzicka3, Javier Quiñones4, Jorge Tam4, Marcelo Acha5, William M. Graham1, Richard Brodeur6, Mary Beth Decker7, Frank Hernandez Jr.8, Robert Leaf8, Hermes Mianzan9 and Shin-ichi Uye10, (1)University of Southern Mississippi, Marine Science, Stennis Space Center, MS, United States, (2)Oregon State University, Hatfield Marine Science Center, Newport, OR, United States, (3)Oregon State University, Cooperative Institute for Marine Resources Studies, Newport, OR, United States, (4)Instituto del Mar del Perú (IMARPE), Callao, Peru, (5)Instituto Nacional de Investigación y Desarrollo Pesquero (INIDEP), Mar del Plata, Argentina, (6)NOAA Northwest Fisheries Science Center, Newport Research Station, Newport, OR, United States, (7)Yale University, New Haven, CT, United States, (8)University of Southern Mississippi, Coastal Sciences, Ocean Springs, MS, United States, (9)Instituto Nacional de Investigación y Desarrollo Pesquero, Mar del Plata, Argentina, (10)Hiroshima University, Graduate School of Biosphere Science, Hiroshima, Japan
Abstract:
Increases in the frequency of jellyfish mass occurrences in a number of coastal areas around the globe have intensified concerns that some ecosystems are becoming “jellyfish-dominated”. Gelatinous planktivores not only compete with forage fish for food, but also feed on fish eggs and larvae. When jellyfish abundance is high, the fraction of the energy and the efficiency at which it is transferred upwards in the food web are reduced compared with times when fish are dominant. Hence, ecosystems supporting major forage fish fisheries are the most likely to experience fish-to-jellyfish shifts due to the harvest pressure on mid-trophic planktivores. Although forage fish-jellyfish replacement cycles have been detected in recent decades in some productive, coastal ecosystems (e.g. Gulf of Mexico, Northern California Current), jellyfish are typically not included in ecosystem-based fisheries management (EBFM) production models. Here we explored the roles of jellyfish and forage fish as trophic energy transfer pathways to higher trophic levels in the Northern Humboldt Current (NHC) ecosystem, one of the most productive ecosystems in the world. A trophic network model with 33 functional groups was developed using ECOPATH and transformed to an end-to-end model using ECOTRAN techniques to map food web energy flows. Predicted, relative changes in functional group productivity were analyzed in simulations with varying forage fish consumption rates, jellyfish consumption rates, and forage fish harvest rates in a suite of static, alternative-energy-demand scenarios. Our modeling efforts will not only improve EBFM of forage fish and their predators in the NHC ecosystem, but also increase our understanding of trophic interactions between forage fish and large jellyfish, an important, but overlooked component in most ecosystem models to date.