From the biology of the individual to the dynamics of the population: bridging the gap in fish early life studies
Authored by A Gallego, M Heath
Date Published: 1997
DOI: 10.1111/j.1095-8649.1997.tb06090.x
Sponsors:
European Union
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
The mean properties of larval fish populations do not necessarily
reflect the properties of the mean individual. For example, the change
in mean length in a population with time may not reflect the average
individual growth rate, since individual growth rates and survival
probability are linked so that slow growing individuals suffer higher
mortality. Hence, mean growth rate indicated from population data could
be biased upwards. Factors which influence the magnitude and variability
of individual growth rates can exert nonlinear effects on population
survival. Two categories of process must be considered: first, the
variability in exposure of the average individual as a consequence of
individual variability in dispersal through a patchy environment; and
second, the intrinsic variability between individuals expressed even
under equal exposure conditions. These two aspects have been addressed
independently, the first by lagrangian modelling of individual fish
larvae linked to spatially resolved hydrodynamic models. and the second
by strategic biological modelling. In this paper, progress towards the
goal of individually based larval fish ecosystem models is reviewed, highlighting the space and rime scales which may be important in such
systems, and identifying the gaps in current knowledge of larval
biology.
Tags
Marine fish
Cod gadus-morhua
North-sea
Haddock melanogrammus-aeglefinus
Pelagic fish
Scotian shelf
Of-the-year
Herring larvae
Plankton production
Newfoundland shelf