Trophic transfer in seagrass systems: estimating seasonal production of an abundant seagrass fish, Bairdiella chrysoura, in lower Chesapeake Bay
Authored by Kathryn L Sobocinski, Robert J Latour
Date Published: 2015
DOI: 10.3354/meps11163
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Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
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Abstract
Silver perch Bairdiella chrysoura is a seasonally abundant fish in lower
Chesapeake Bay seagrass habitats. Young-of-the-year fish recruit to
these habitats in June and rear for the remainder of the summer before
migrating to deeper habitats in the Bay and offshore as seawater cools
in the fall. This species has been shown to be abundant in seagrass
habitats, yet like many fishes in these habitats, little is known about
its growth and production, and thus the contribution of this habitat
type to overall production. We developed a bioenergetics model to
estimate individual silver perch growth and calibrated this model using
field-collected size data. Abundance data were used to develop a
generalized additive model for predicting abundance over the simulation
period (15 June to 15 October). We used the individual-based model
output and estimated abundances to calculate total production. The
calibrated bioenergetics model showed silver perch growth of
approximately 0.19 g d(-1) for total growth of 23.2 g over the
simulation period. Peak abundance occurred in July with estimated values
of 0.2 ind. m(-2). The highest biomass was observed shortly after peak
abundance. Total production for silver perch was estimated to be 22.9 g
m(-2) in the seagrass habitats measured. With an estimated 8100 ha of
seagrass habitat in the lower Chesapeake Bay in 2010, silver perch
contribute a considerable amount of biomass production. As an annually
migrating species, silver perch export in excess of 7400 t of biomass to
the near-coastal ecosystem, providing a trophic subsidy from seagrass
habitats via trophic transfer.
Tags
Gulf-of-mexico
Habitat selection
Feeding-habits
Spotted sea-trout
Juvenile estuarine fishes
Drum sciaenops-ocellatus
Bioenergetics models
Zostera-marina
Food-consumption
Dissolved-oxygen