Modelling food web structure using an end-to-end approach in the coastal ecosystem of the Gulf of Gabes (Tunisia)
Authored by Yunne-Jai Shin, Frederic Diaz, Ricardo Oliveros-Ramos, Philippe Verley, Laure Velez, Ghassen Halouani, Loc'h Francois Le, Frida Ben Rais Lasram, Tarek Hattab, Frederic Menard, Melika Baklouti, Arnaud Guyennon, Mohamed Salah Romdhane
Date Published: 2016
DOI: 10.1016/j.ecolmodel.2016.08.008
Sponsors:
Fondation TOTAL
Platforms:
R
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Flow charts
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Given the ecological importance and high socio-economic value of the
fishery of the Gulf of Gabes, an end-to-end model was applied to its
continental shelf ecosystem to characterize the structure of the food
web in the 2000s. This approach consisted in forcing a high trophic
level model (OSMOSE) with an existing biogeochemical model (Eco3M-MED)
representing the seasonal dynamics of the low trophic levels. The two
models were linked through trophic interactions to represent the
ecosystem dynamics from primary producers to top predators. In this
study, we developed the multispecies, individual-based model OSMOSE in
the Gulf of Gabes (OSMOSE-GoG). This model aims to capture the main
processes that influence species life cycle and simulate the functioning
of the ecosystem according to opportunistic predation process based on
size selection and spatio-temporal co-occurrence between a predator and
its prey. The spatial distribution of the eleven modelled species was
derived from a Multi-Scale Species Distribution Modelling approach. We
calibrated OSMOSE-GoG model with available data of biomass and fishing
yield, using an optimization method based on evolutionary algorithms
which is suitable for complex and stochastic models. Finally, OSMOSE-GoG
was validated against independent data sets at different hierarchical
levels: the individual (diet composition), population (mean size of
commercial catch) and community levels (mean trophic level) following
the Pattern-Oriented Modelling approach. The model outputs were overall
consistent with the diet compositions and mean trophic levels derived
from the ECOPATH model of the Gulf of Gabes (ECOPATH-GoG) and the
observations of mean size of catches. The OSMOSE-GoG can be considered
as a baseline Model to investigate ecosystem responses to environmental
changes and fishing management measures in the Gulf of Gabes. (C) 2016
Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Tags
Individual-based model
Climate
Management
Dynamics
Community
sensitivity
Species distribution
Marine ecosystems
Southern
benguela
Mediterranean sea