Sensitivity of Lake Sturgeon Population Dynamics and Genetics to Demographic Parameters
Authored by Daniel B Hayes, Amy M Schueller
Date Published: 2010
DOI: 10.1577/t09-035.1
Sponsors:
No sponsors listed
Platforms:
Statistical Analysis Software (SAS)
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Uncertainty in population parameters can make managing fisheries
difficult, especially for long-lived species such as lake sturgeon
Acipenser fulvescens. Models can be used to explore population parameter
uncertainty and how uncertainty affects demographic and genetic
population outputs through the use of sensitivity analyses. The
objective of this study was to determine which lake sturgeon population
parameters have the greatest influence on demographic characteristics, including rates of extinction and percentage of populations increasing
from their initial size, and population genetic characteristics, including percentage of unique alleles retained and average inbreeding
coefficient. An individual-based modeling approach that represented
demographic and genetic processes was used to achieve this objective.
Individual lake sturgeon were tracked throughout the modeling process
with unique identifiers, allowing for the determination of the degree of
inbreeding and the number of unique alleles retained. Sensitivity
analyses were performed by changing one parameter at a time across a
range of plausible values while holding all of the other parameters at
their nominal values. All responses were hypersensitive to
young-of-the-year mortality, post-young-of-the-year mortality, age at
first maturation for females, and probability of mating for females. The
post-young-of-the-year mortality rate was the most sensitive of all of
the population parameters. The outputs were relatively insensitive to
changes in the age at first maturation for males and the probability of
mating for males. Sensitivity was dependent upon the initial population
size, with population parameters having differing sensitivities with
respect to other parameters for smaller and larger population sizes. The
demographic and genetic outputs were related to one another via similar
relationships for each of the population sizes. These analyses should be
used to target rehabilitation efforts on altering population parameters
with the largest influence on population persistence and genetic
integrity.
Tags
Individual-based model
Management
Extinction risk
Viability analysis
Environmental stochasticity
Conservation genetics
Inbreeding depression
Red-cockaded woodpeckers
Life-histories
Bioenergetics models