The role of density-dependent individual growth in the persistence of freshwater salmonid populations
Authored by Simone Vincenzi, Leo Giulio A De, Alain J Crivelli, Dusan Jesensek
Date Published: 2008
DOI: 10.1007/s00442-008-1012-3
Sponsors:
Foundation Sansouire
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Theoretical and empirical models of populations dynamics have paid
little attention to the implications of density-dependent individual
growth on the persistence and regulation of small freshwater salmonid
populations. We have therefore designed a study aimed at testing our
hypothesis that density-dependent individual growth is a process that
enhances population recovery and reduces extinction risk in salmonid
populations in a variable environment subject to disturbance events.
This hypothesis was tested in two newly introduced marble trout (Salmo
marmoratus) populations living in Slovenian streams (Zakojska and
Gorska) subject to severe autumn floods. We developed a discrete-time
stochastic individual-based model of population dynamics for each
population with demographic parameters and compensatory responses
tightly calibrated on data from individually tagged marble trout. The
occurrence of severe flood events causing population collapses was
explicitly accounted for in the model. We used the model in a population
viability analysis setting to estimate the quasi-extinction risk and
demographic indexes of the two marble trout populations when individual
growth was density-dependent. We ran a set of simulations in which the
effect of floods on population abundance was explicitly accounted for
and another set of simulations in which flood events were not included
in the model. These simulation results were compared with those of
scenarios in which individual growth was modelled with
density-independent Von Bertalanffy growth curves. Our results show how
density-dependent individual growth may confer remarkable resilience to
marble trout populations in case of major flood events. The resilience
to flood events shown by the simulation results can be explained by the
increase in size-dependent fecundity as a consequence of the drop in
population size after a severe flood, which allows the population to
quickly recover to the pre-event conditions. Our results suggest that
density-dependent individual growth plays a potentially powerful role in
the persistence of freshwater salmonids living in streams subject to
recurrent yet unpredictable flood events.
Tags
Atlantic salmon
Brown trout
Salvelinus-fontinalis
Life-histories
Stream fish assemblage
Brook trout population
Marble
trout
Catastrophic flood
Viability
analysis
Trutta population