Exploring relationships between recruitment of European hake(Merluccius merluccius L. 1758) and environmental factors in theLigurian Sea and the Strait of Sicily (Central Mediterranean)

This paper explores the relationships between the spatial patterns of the distribution of the young hakes of the year (YOY) and the oceanographical features in two areas of the Central Mediterranean (the Ligurian Sea and the Strait of Sicily), characterised by the occurrence of straits and channels....

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Journal of Marine Systems
Main Authors: A. Abella, F. Fiorentino, MANNINI, ALESSANDRO, ORSI, LIDIA
Other Authors: A., Abella, F., Fiorentino, Mannini, Alessandro, Orsi, Lidia
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2008
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Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11567/366114
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jmarsys.2007.05.010
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Summary:This paper explores the relationships between the spatial patterns of the distribution of the young hakes of the year (YOY) and the oceanographical features in two areas of the Central Mediterranean (the Ligurian Sea and the Strait of Sicily), characterised by the occurrence of straits and channels. Comparative and correlative approaches were used to investigate coupling between biological and physical patterns. Density indices of the YOY were derived from annual trawl surveys from 1994 to 2004 in spring and autumn. Mean patterns of theYOYdistributionswere comparedwith the mesoscale oceanographical features reported in literature.No evident trends in recruitment strength were found in either areas. Inter-annual variability in YOYabundance in the Ligurian Sea was higher than in the Strait of Sicily. The location of nursery grounds in the study areas coincides with zones of relatively higher production, where upwelling and other enrichment processes regularly occur. The presence of predictable eddies and the frontal systems play a major role in the localization of nursery areas in the Strait of Sicily, maintaining their stable position throughout the years. The strongest transport of southern waters from the Tyrrhenian to the Ligurian Sea, due to the East Corsica Current, which is negatively correlated to winter North Atlantic Oscillation, is associated with the highest abundance of hake recruits in the nurseries of the Northern Ligurian Sea.