Estimating larval fish growth under size-dependent mortality: a numerical analysis of bias
Authored by Oyvind Fiksen, Tian Tian, Arild Folkvord
Date Published: 2007
DOI: 10.1139/f07-031
Sponsors:
Norwegian Research Council (NRF)
Platforms:
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Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
The early larval phase is characterized by high growth and mortality
rates. Estimates of growth from both population (cross-sectional) and
individual (longitudinal) data may be biased when mortality is
size-dependent. Here, we use a simple individual-based model to assess
the range of bias in estimates of growth under various size-dependent
patterns of growth and mortality rates. A series of simulations indicate
that size distribution of individuals in the population may contribute
significantly to bias in growth estimates, but that typical
size-dependent growth patterns have minor effects. Growth rate estimates
from longitudinal data (otolith readings) are closer to true values than
estimates from cross-sectional data (population growth rates). The
latter may produce bias in growth estimation of about 0.03 day(-1) (in
instantaneous, specific growth rate) or > 40\% difference in some
situations. Four potential patterns of size-dependent mortality are
tested and analyzed for their impact on growth estimates. The bias is
shown to yield large differences in estimated cohort survival rates.
High autocorrelation and variance in growth rates tend to increase
growth estimates and bias, as well as recruitment success. We also found
that autocorrelated growth patterns, reflecting environmental variance
structure, had strong impact on recruitment success of a cohort.
Tags
models
patterns
Recruitment
Populations
Temperature
Survival
Cod gadus-morhua
Atlantic cod
Environmental variability
Prey
patchiness