Simulation of physically mediated variability in prey resources of a larval fish: a three-dimensional NPZ model
Authored by S Hinckley, J M Napp, A J Hermann, C Parada
Date Published: 2009
DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2419.2009.00505.x
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Abstract
A three-dimensional biophysical nutrient-phytoplankton-zooplankton model
was used to investigate the spatial and temporal dynamics of food
resources for young walleye pollock in the western Gulf of Alaska, to
further understanding of recruitment processes for pollock. We modeled
nitrogen, phytoplankton, a large herbivorous grazer parameterized as
Neocalanus spp. (the biomass dominant copepod in the Gulf), and the 13
stages (egg, naupliar and copepodite) of Pseudocalanus spp. (a major
constituent of the diet of pollock) so that the appropriate size class
of food for each size of larval pollock was represented. Model results
identified an area between the Semidi and Shumagin Islands that may not
be suitable as a nursery area early in the year due to low prey
abundance. Modeled mesoscale eddies, previously hypothesized to be
important for larval pollock retention in Shelikof Strait, contained
higher prey concentrations than the surrounding waters when they were
cyclonic. This work also help to understand the consistency of pollock
spawning in time and space in Shelikof Strait, by examining the timing
and location of prey availability which, along with transport, narrows
the window for optimal spawning.
Tags
Spatially-explicit
Individual-based
model
Early-life-history
Pollock theragra-chalcogramma
Arctic pacific-ocean
Alaska walleye pollock
Eddy-resolving
model
Shelikof-strait
Mesoscale eddies
Standing
stock