Emerging school structures and collective dynamics in spawning herring: A simulation study
Authored by Rune Vabo, Georg Skaret
Date Published: 2008
DOI: 10.1016/j.ecolmodel.2008.01.026
Sponsors:
Norwegian Research Council (NRF)
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Schooling fish are known to display various collective behaviours
depending on ecological context and life history situation. In Norwegian
spring spawning herring (NSS-herring) (Clupea harengus) different
trade-offs during the seasons of feeding, overwintering, migration and
spawning are likely to influence school morphology and behaviour. in the
field, hydro acoustics are able to record collective patterns, but
hardly the mechanisms of how individual decisions and interactions lead
to the observed formations. Individual based models (IBMs) on the other
hand, are promising simulation tools for investigating how low-level
individual behaviour influences large-scale behaviour. We have used this
approach with a rule based school model in order to gain understanding
of how certain school patterns can emerge during the spawning of
NSS-herring. Response to predation and motivation towards spawning are
added to the response to nearby fish. Simply by varying population size
and synchronisation of spawning motivation we find different system
responses in terms of school morphology and dynamics. With high
motivational synchronisation, the system is mainly represented by one
integrated school, whereas low degree of synchronisation presents a
system with frequent split-offs of small schools. An intermediate degree
of synchronisation leads to a more complex situation with schools or
layers in a dynamic vertical contact and formation of vertical
`hourglasses' or cylindrical shaped schools. This suggests that the
degree of motivational synchronisation between individuals in a school
will determine whether or to what degree a school splits into different
components or remains integrated. We also find that with increasing
population size there are new system behaviours emerging, not present
with lower population size. Larger populations lead to horizontal
extension of the pre-spawning components resulting in a double layer
system where vertical bridges connecting the two layers are established.
The cylindrical bridges are truly emergent properties of the system, formed and maintained by ovulating and spent herring moving across these
structures. Similar school formations with vertical connections have
been observed acoustically in spawning herring schools. (c) 2008
Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Tags
behavior
Emergent properties
Animal groups
Size
Life-history
Individual-based
model
Vertical-distribution
Aggregations
Pelagic planktivorous fish
Clupea-harengus-pallasi