Book Chapter

A review of biophysical models of marine larval dispersal

SE Swearer, EA Treml, JS Shima

Oceanography and Marine Biology | Oceanography and Marine Biology: an annual review | Published : 2019

Abstract

Larval dispersal is arguably the most important but least understood demographic process in the sea. The likelihood of a larva dispersing from its birthplace to successfully recruit in another location is the culmination of many intrinsic and extrinsic factors that operate in early life. Empirically estimating the resulting population connectivity has been immensely difficult because of the challenges of studying and quantifying dispersal in the sea. Consequently, most estimates are based on predictions from biophysical models. Although there is a long history of dispersal modelling, there has been no comprehensive review of this literature. We conducted a systematic quantitative review to a..

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University of Melbourne Researchers

Grants

Awarded by University of Melbourne


Funding Acknowledgements

This contribution was supported by the National Centre for Coasts and Climate at the University of Melbourne. Many of our ideas were developed and refined with support from the Victorian Government's Seagrass and Reefs Program (SS & ET) and the New Zealand Marsden Fund (JS & SS; Awards: 2002-04, 2007-10, 2013-16 and 2016-19). We are grateful to D. Chamberlain for assistance in assembling the database and to S. Hawkins, S. Jenkins and an anonymous reviewer for editorial suggestions.