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the humboldt current system of northern and central chile - figema

the humboldt current system of northern and central chile - figema

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THE HUMBOLDT CURRENT SYSTEM OF NORTHERN AND CENTRAL CHILESettlement studies in <strong>the</strong> HSCA more tractable <strong>and</strong> directly related problem is <strong>the</strong> settlement <strong>and</strong> recruitment <strong>of</strong> species to agiven habitat. Settlement is <strong>the</strong> process through which a spore or larva makes permanent contactwith <strong>the</strong> benthic habitat (Keough & Downes 1982). Since most adults <strong>of</strong> benthic organisms aresessile or have limited movement, settlement marks <strong>the</strong> end <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> effective dispersal phase. Forbrooding organisms with mobile adults or those that use rafting as a secondary dispersal mechanismthis is <strong>of</strong> course not <strong>the</strong> case (Thiel & Haye 2006). Recruitment is <strong>the</strong> input <strong>of</strong> new individuals to<strong>the</strong> benthic population measured at some arbitrary time after settlement. Therefore, while settlementis expected to reflect <strong>the</strong> arrival or supply <strong>of</strong> propagules, recruitment can be substantially modifiedby postsettlement mortality. Of <strong>the</strong> considerable number <strong>of</strong> studies <strong>of</strong> supply ecology conducted in<strong>the</strong> HCS over <strong>the</strong> past decades, very few have come close to measuring settlement (H<strong>of</strong>fmann &Ugarte 1985, H<strong>of</strong>fmann 1987, Moreno et al. 1993a, 1998, Martínez & Navarrete 2002, Vargas et al.2004, Lagos et al. 2005, Narváez et al. 2006), <strong>and</strong> most have actually examined recruitment atvarying time intervals after settlement. The paucity <strong>of</strong> studies <strong>of</strong> settlement <strong>of</strong> marine algae, duelargely to <strong>the</strong> enormous difficulties <strong>of</strong> identifying sporelings to species level (H<strong>of</strong>fmann 1987,Santelices 1990a), has not permitted <strong>the</strong> identification <strong>of</strong> mechanisms involved in algal settlementpatterns. On <strong>the</strong> o<strong>the</strong>r h<strong>and</strong>, using intertidal barnacles, mussels <strong>and</strong> several gastropod species asmodel organisms, a few larval transport mechanisms have been demonstrated in <strong>the</strong> <strong>central</strong> <strong>and</strong>sou<strong>the</strong>rn HCS. At <strong>the</strong> locality <strong>of</strong> Las Cruces in <strong>central</strong> Chile, which has been characterised as anupwelling shadow (Kaplan et al. 2003, Wieters et al. 2003, Narváez et al. 2004), <strong>the</strong> onshore dailysettlement <strong>of</strong> several invertebrate species is associated with conditions that favour <strong>the</strong> occurrence<strong>of</strong> internal tidal bores, which appear to be common in <strong>the</strong> area when <strong>the</strong> water column is wellstratified (Vargas et al. 2004). These results suggest that, for a number <strong>of</strong> intertidal invertebrates,internal tidal bores (Pineda 1991, 1994a) can be an important mechanism <strong>of</strong> onshore transport. Incontrast with results at some sites in <strong>the</strong> California upwelling eco<strong>system</strong> (e.g., Farrell et al. 1991,Wing et al. 1995a), studies at Las Cruces showed that settlement <strong>of</strong> invertebrates was not directlyassociated with upwelling-relaxation events, which occur throughout spring <strong>and</strong> summer oversynoptic timescales. The suggestion here is not that <strong>the</strong> upwelling-relaxation transport model (e.g.,Roughgarden et al. 1988, 1991, Wing et al. 1995a,b) plays no role in settlement <strong>and</strong> recruitmentin <strong>central</strong> Chile, but ra<strong>the</strong>r that at Las Cruces larval transport toward <strong>the</strong> shore does not seem tobe dominated by <strong>the</strong>se mechanisms. Indeed, spatially intensive studies over a region <strong>of</strong> about120 km around Las Cruces showed a clear mesoscale spatial pattern in barnacle settlement, apparentlyimposed by <strong>the</strong> topographic variability in upwelling intensity (Lagos et al. 2005). Thus, <strong>the</strong>spatial variability in upwelling intensity typical <strong>of</strong> <strong>central</strong> Chile (Strub et al. 1998, Broitman et al.2001, Halpin et al. 2004) might influence <strong>the</strong> spatial position <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> larval pool <strong>and</strong> probably affects<strong>the</strong> scales <strong>of</strong> dispersal <strong>of</strong> invertebrates, as suggested also by <strong>the</strong> study <strong>of</strong> spatial synchrony inrecruitment <strong>of</strong> species with contrasting dispersal potential (Lagos et al. in review). Topographiceffects on patterns <strong>of</strong> settlement <strong>and</strong> recruitment have also been reported for a variety <strong>of</strong> brachyurancrab species (A.T. Palma et al. 2006). Buoyancy fronts produced by river plumes, common fromabout 30°S to <strong>the</strong> south in <strong>the</strong> HCS, in conjunction with wind stress can also play a role in deliveringlarvae to shore (Vargas et al. 2006c). Narváez et al. (2006) also report on <strong>the</strong> effect <strong>of</strong> what <strong>the</strong>ycalled ‘large warming events’, which occurred a few times in spring–summer in association withdownwelling-favourable (nor<strong>the</strong>rly) winds. During <strong>the</strong>se specific large warming events <strong>the</strong>se authorsobserved significant synchrony in recruitment <strong>of</strong> several invertebrate taxa (decapods, gastropods,polychaetes, mussels <strong>and</strong> sea urchins), suggesting that larvae could be entrained in <strong>the</strong>se advectivefronts <strong>and</strong> delivered onshore. A roughly similar phenomenon has been observed around Valdiviain sou<strong>the</strong>rn Chile, where southward <strong>and</strong> onshore movement <strong>of</strong> warm waters produced by winter249

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