Sampling sites along the southern California coast around 32N 117W and northwest coast of Mexico from 2003-2009 (Bivalve Connectivity project)

Website: https://www.bco-dmo.org/dataset/3635
Version: 29 March 2012
Version Date: 2012-03-29

Project
» Temporal and spatial scales of variability in bivalve connectivity (Bivalve Connectivity)
ContributorsAffiliationRole
Levin, Lisa A.University of California-San Diego (UCSD-SIO)Principal Investigator
Muccino, Julia C.Arizona State University (ASU)Co-Principal Investigator
Rasmussen, Linda L.University of California-San Diego (UCSD-SIO)Co-Principal Investigator
Gonzalez, JenniferUniversity of California-San Diego (UCSD-SIO)Contact
Gegg, Stephen R.Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI BCO-DMO)BCO-DMO Data Manager


Dataset Description

Sampling sites for Inshore larval connectivity studies conducted from May/2003 - Nov/2009


Methods & Sampling

Contributed by PI


Data Processing Description

Downloaded as a separate file from sheet: "Site Locations" in file "BC_M.californianusMatrices.xls" contributed by Lisa Levin
- Corrections to original list made by Jen Gonzalez
- 4 Stations added to original list by Jen Gonzalez
- Lat/Lon converted to decimal degrees


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Data Files

File
Sampling_Sites.csv
(Comma Separated Values (.csv), 833 bytes)
MD5:dc518a5417d2b89b885cf9e28131392e
Primary data file for dataset ID 3635

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Parameters

ParameterDescriptionUnits
Latitudelatitude in decimal degrees (positive is North) decimal degrees
Longitudelongitude in decimal degrees (negative is West) decimal degrees
AbbreviationSite Abbreviation text
SiteSite Name dimensionless

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Deployments

BC_May2003-Nov2009

Website
Platform
Bivalve Connectivity
Start Date
2003-05-01
End Date
2009-11-30
Description
Life history data collection and Inshore larval connectivity studies May/2003 - Nov/2009 A series of sites re-visited on separate occasions from May/2003 - Nov/2009 General Location of the Sites: Southern California Coast around 32N, 117W Northwest Coast of Mexico - Bajamar, MX and Punta Morro, MX


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Project Information

Temporal and spatial scales of variability in bivalve connectivity (Bivalve Connectivity)


Coverage: Southern California Coast around 32N, 117W, NW Mexico


Temporal and spatial scales of variability in bivalve connectivity

Larval connectivity, the extent to which sub-populations exchange larvae, has emerged as a fundamental concept within the diverse arenas of population ecology, biotic resource management, biodiversity conservation, invasive species control, and habitat restoration. However, determining dispersal trajectories of larvae and their scales of variability remain a major challenge. Project investigators Levin, Muccino and Rasmussen will use an integration of prospective modeling and retrospective (elemental fingerprinting) approaches to assess variability in larval connectivity and its demographic consequences for mytilid mussel populations in southern California. This project builds on initial studies of mytilid connectivity to address in greater depth and with a more strongly coupled physical/biological approach, questions of variability and its causes.

These collaborating scientists will address hypotheses concerning the spatial and temporal scales of connectivity for mussels, Mytilus californianus and Mytilus galloprovincialis, examining their consistency among sites and species. This will be accomplished through (a) larval out-planting at 18 locations in San Diego County several times a year to generate reference signatures for trace elemental fingerprinting, (b) collection of recruits and elemental analyses of their larval shells to determine sites and regions of origins, and (c) high frequency data collection at 2 bay locations for M. galloprovincialis and 2 open coast locations for M. californianus to carry out weekly analysis of recruitment variability, its link to chemical signals and recruit origins, and for collection of demographic data (size-specific survivorship, growth and fecundity).

Through numerical dispersal simulations of the coastal ocean and bays, and subsequent comparisons to fingerprinting based assessment of recruit origins, they will examine the roles of circulation, local vs. remote forcing, bay-ocean interaction, episodic events, and larval attributes (vertical behavior, release times, planktonic duration) in defining the variability of connectivity. Demographic data will be combined with connectivity data to model the population and meta-population level fitness consequences of observed mytilid connectivity patterns.

The results of connectivity studies have direct applicability to conservation and management of commercial and natural bivalve populations, and given the key structural role of mussels, to the conservation of rocky shore habitats.



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Funding

Funding SourceAward
NSF Division of Ocean Sciences (NSF OCE)
NSF Division of Ocean Sciences (NSF OCE)

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