PISCATOR, an individual-based model to analyze the dynamics of lake fish communities
Authored by Marten Scheffer, Egbert van Nes, EHRR Lammens
Date Published: 2002
DOI: 10.1016/s0304-3800(02)00005-4
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Abstract
Unraveling the mechanisms that drive dynamics of multi-species fish
communities is notoriously difficult. Not only are the interactions
between fish populations complex. but also the functional niche of
individual animals changes profoundly as them grow, making variation in
size within populations and even within cohorts highly important to
consider. Not surprisingly, traditional aggregated populations models
have proved limited in their capacity to describe the dynamics of
interacting fish species, and individual-based models have become
popular for modeling fish populations. Nonetheless. the majority of the
individual-based models describes either a single species or focus
entirely on a certain life stage. We present the individual-based model
Piscator, which describes a multi-species fish community and
demonstrates techniques to deal with the inherent complexity of such a
model. We propose a novel procedure for calibration and analysis, in
which the complexity of the model is increased step-by-step. We also
illustrate the use of a special Monte-Carlo sensitivity analysis to
identify clusters of parameters that have roughly the same effects on
the model results. As an example. we use the model to analyze a fishery
experiment in the Frisian Lakes (The Netherlands). Despite high bream
catches (40 - 50 kg ha(-1) per ear), it A as observed that the seine
fishery had unexpected little effect on the bream population. Our
simulation results suggest that if one takes community feedbacks and
climatic variability into account, this effect can be explained. The
main cause was. besides a reduction of piscivory due to a simultaneous
gill-net fishery. a coincidental strong year-class just before the
fishery started. The strong development of this year-class could be
explained by 3 subsequent warm years, whereas dearly variations in
recruitment were less important. We also suggest that this relatively
realistic model could play a role in ecological theory. It can be used
to analyze the conditions for multi-year cycles and chaotic dynamics, phenomena that are usually predicted only from simple abstract models.
(C) 2002 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved.
Tags
Phytoplankton
Simulation-model
Population-dynamics
Temperature
Growth-rate
Size
Of-the-year
Top-down control
Frisian lakes
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