Protracted reproduction in sunfish: The temporal dimension in fish recruitment revisited
Authored by JE Garvey, TP Herra, WC Leggett
Date Published: 2002
DOI: 10.2307/3061146
Sponsors:
National Science and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC)
United States National Science Foundation (NSF)
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Understanding how life histories influence reproductive success under
uncertain conditions is necessary to predict population dynamics. For
many organisms, protracted reproduction may increase expected offspring
recruitment in variable environments, requiring that temporal patterns
of reproduction be considered when developing management or conservation
strategies. We explored the interrelationships among birth date, production of embryos on nests, survival of larvae to the open-water
stage, and survival of juveniles through the first fall and winter of
life for bluegill and pumpkinseed sunfish (Lepomis macrochirus and L.
gibbosus) in Lake Opinicon, Ontario, during May 1998 through May 1999.
Age-0 sunfish were sampled with nesting surveys for embryos, surface
tows for free-swimming larvae, and seining/trawling for juveniles. Age
of juveniles (days post swim-up) was quantified using otoliths. The
abundance of embryos on nests and the density of open-water larvae were
unrelated across all dates and sites. Although 40\% of larvae had
appeared in the open water by 12 June, most juveniles sampled in the
fall were produced after that time, suggesting that high mortality of
early produced larvae occurred. Larval survival to the juvenile stage
was generally unrelated to the abundance of edible zooplankton taxa
during swim-up from nests. Larval survival was often highest at
temperatures >23.5degreesC. Fall length of age-0 sunfish increased with
increasing age. Both age-specific length and mean lengths shifted
positively between October 1998 and May 1999, suggesting that growth of
all individuals and perhaps selective mortality of small juveniles
occurred.
Although early reproduction may increase sizes reached by fall and
thereby improve overwinter survival, early hatched larvae are subject to
variable environmental factors that may reduce survival. Late-hatched
larvae may reach relatively smaller sizes by fall, but have higher
survival probabilities during this life stage. Protracted reproduction
appears to be a response to variable environmental factors influencing
growth and survival across multiple life stages. As such, all
reproducing adults, rather than those perceived to produce offspring
during typically favorable times, must be protected from exploitation or
other human-induced perturbations.
Tags
Individual-based model
Life-history
Body-size
Food webs
Larval fish
Overwinter mortality
Smallmouth bass
Age-0 largemouth bass
Lepomis-macrochirus
Energy
allocation