HURRY UP AND WAIT - GROWTH OF YOUNG BLUEGILLS IN PONDS AND IN SIMULATIONS WITH AN INDIVIDUAL-BASED MODEL
Authored by JE BRECK
Date Published: 1993
DOI: 10.1577/1548-8659(1993)122<0467:huawgo>2.3.co;2
Sponsors:
Federal Aid in Sport Fish Restoration Program
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
The growth of young-of-the-year bluegills Lepomis macrochirus was
measured in six experimental ponds and simulated with an
individual-based model. In the ponds the young bluegills grew at a rate
of about 0.6 mm/d for 3-4 weeks, An abrupt reduction in growth rate to
about 0.2 mm/d occurred when total zooplankton density (exclusive of
rotifers) decreased below about 50 organisms/L, and growth rate
decreased to nearly zero by September. The model included daily foraging
for several sizes of open-water or benthic prey and a revised set of
bioenergetics parameters for bluegill. The simulations suggest that the
initially rapid growth rate was near the limit set by maximum daily
ration; the fish may have obtained full rations even with suboptimal
foraging during this phase. Over a wide range of fry densities, the time
of growth reduction and the average final fish size at the end of the
growing season were strongly density dependent, both in the simulations
and in the ponds. Two natal cohorts started 10 d apart in the
simulations. The size-frequency distributions produced by this
individual-based model showed that these two cohorts remained distinct
at starting densities below about 1 fish/m3, but tended to overlap in
size at higher densities.
Tags
Habitat use
patterns
zooplankton
Temperature
Consumption
Walleye
Sunfish
Fish size
Foraging efficiency
Perch