A coupled movement and bioenergetics model to explore the spawning migration of anchovy in the Bay of Biscay
Authored by Martin Huret, Dimitrios V Politikos, Pierre Petitgas
Date Published: 2015
DOI: 10.1016/j.ecolmodel.2015.06.036
Sponsors:
European Union
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Adult anchovies in the Bay of Biscay perform north to south migration
from late winter to early summer for spawning. However, what triggers
and drives the geographic shift of the population remains unclear and
poorly understood. An individual-based fish model has been implemented
to explore the potential mechanisms that control anchovy's movement
routes toward its spawning habitats. To achieve this goal, two fish
movement behaviors - gradient detection through restricted area search
and kinesis - simulated fish response to its dynamic environment. A
bioenergetics model was used to represent individual growth and
reproduction along the fish trajectory. The environmental forcing (food, temperature) of the model was provided by a coupled
physical-biogeochemical model. We followed a hypothesis-testing strategy
to actualize a series of simulations using different cues and
computational assumptions. The gradient detection behavior was found as
the most suitable mechanism to recreate the observed shift of anchovy
distribution under the combined effect of sea-surface temperature and
zooplankton. In addition, our results suggested that southward movement
occurred more actively from early April to middle May following
favorably the spatio-temporal evolution of zooplankton and temperature.
In terms of fish bioenergetics, individuals who ended up in the southern
part of the bay presented better condition based on energy content, proposing the resulting energy gain as an ecological explanation for
this migration. The kinesis approach resulted in a moderate performance, producing distribution pattern with the highest spread. Finally, model
performance was not significantly affected by changes on the starting
date, initial fish distribution and number of particles used in the
simulations, whereas it was drastically influenced by the adopted cues.
(C) 2015 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Tags
individual-based models
Uncertainty
Performance
patterns
Populations
Climate-change
Sardine sardinops-melanostictus
Pelagic fishes
Pacific
Engraulis-encrasicolus