Importance of the habitat choice behavior assumed when modeling the effects of food and temperature on fish populations
Authored by ML Wildhaber, PJ Lamberson
Date Published: 2004
DOI: 10.1016/j.ecolmodel.2003.08.022
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Abstract
Various mechanisms of habitat choice in fishes based on food and/or
temperature have been proposed: optimal foraging for food alone;
behavioral thermoregulation for temperature alone; and behavioral
energetics and discounted matching for food and temperature combined.
Along with development of habitat choice mechanisms, there has been a
major push to develop and apply to fish populations individual-based
models that incorporate various forms of these mechanisms. However, it
is not known how the wide variation in observed and hypothesized
mechanisms of fish habitat choice could alter fish population
predictions (e.g. growth, size distributions, etc.). We used spatially
explicit, individual-based modeling to compare predicted fish
populations using different submodels of patch choice behavior under
various food and temperature distributions. We compared predicted
growth, temperature experience, food consumption, and final spatial
distribution using the different models. Our results demonstrated that
the habitat choice mechanism assumed in fish population modeling
simulations was critical to predictions of fish distribution and growth
rates. Hence, resource managers who use modeling results to predict fish
population trends should be very aware of and understand the underlying
patch choice mechanisms used in their models to assure that those
mechanisms correctly represent the fish populations being modeled.
Published by Elsevier B.V.
Tags
Individual-based model
Dynamics
Predation
Spatially explicit
ecology
growth
Trade-off
Larval fish
Bluegill lepomis-macrochirus
Bioenergetics
models