Effects of habitat complexity and relative larval supply on the establishment of early benthic phase red king crab (Paralithodes camtschaticus Tilesius, 1815) populations in Auke Bay, Alaska
Timothy Loher
David A. Armstrong
University of Washington
School of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences
Box 355020
Seattle, WA 98195
Abstract
Between September 1996 and May 1998, the influence of habitat complexity
and larval supply on the establishment of early post-settlement populations
of red king crab (Paralithodes camtschaticus) was studies in
situ in Auke Bay, southeast Alaska. Dive transects and suction
dredge surveys conducted during fall 1996 and spring 1998 indicated that
late age 0 to age 1+ red king crabs were located in only the most complex
habitat. This pattern was similar to patterns observed for early
age 0 crabs, using settlement pails, during the summer of 1997. Early
instars recruited into settlement pails containing ambient sediment at
both rocky cobble and shell-hash sites, but no settlement could be detected
in muddy habitat. Population density of age 0+ crab peaked in mid-July,
then dropped throughout the summer, and greater densities were always observed
in rocky cobble than in shell-hash. Simultaneous use of passive larval
collectors ruled out the possibility that these patterns were simply a
reflection of larval supply. Rather, the highest levels of larval
supply were associated with the muddy site at which no settlement could
be detected. The availability of complex habitat, defined simply
as substrate rich in available crevice space that is scaled to the body
size of the crab instars, appeared to be the primary determinant of the
value of the nursery habitat, and it is likely to be the critical factor
determining early post-settlement survivorship in the population.
Such considerations are vital to management of red king crab fisheries
where complex nursery habitat is likely to be relatively rare and where
conflicts with trawl fisheries and othe anthropogenic disturbances to bottom
habitat are a potential concern.