An Individual Based Model of Arctic cod (Boreogadus saida) early life in Arctic polynyas: II. Length-dependent and growth-dependent mortality
Authored by Stephane Thanassekos, Louis Fortier, Dominique Robert
Date Published: 2012
DOI: 10.1016/j.jmarsys.2011.08.001
Sponsors:
National Science and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC)
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
A bioenergetics individual based model (IBM) of early growth is used to
investigate the relative importance of length-dependent and
growth-dependent mortality during the early life (0-45 d) of Arctic cod
in the Northeast Water (NEW) in 1993 and the North Water (NOW) in 1998.
In the model, individual growth is forced by the observed temperature
and prey concentration histories as prescribed by the hatch date of a
larva. The IBM reproduced well the observed length-at-age and revealed
large ontogenetic and interregional fluctuations in instantaneous
growth. Four mortality scenarios were compared for each population: (1)
constant mortality (estimated from catch-at-age data); (2)
length-dependent mortality; (3) growth-dependent mortality; and (4)
combined length- and growth-dependent mortality. Scenarios 2,3, and 4
were parameterized to achieve the final survival produced by the
constant mortality rates estimated from observations (scenario 1).
Scenario 2 accounted well for declining mortality with size but not for
the large variations in growth-dependent mortality. Scenario 3 failed to
capture the decreasing vulnerability of surviving larvae to predation.
Only scenario 4 accounted for both the large fluctuations in
growth-dependent mortality and the progressive shift in dominance from
length-dependent to growth-dependent mortality as the survivors
increased in size. Sub-sampling the model output to reproduce the
limited temporal resolution of sampling at sea improved the fit between
observed and modeled frequencies-at-age, and pointed to the
under-sampling of the smallest larvae as a major sampling bias. (C) 2011
Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Tags
Size
Selective predation
Chesapeake bay
Larval fish
Anchovy engraulis-japonicus
At-age data
Postsettlement
survivorship
Physical processes
Natural
mortality
Gear selectivity