REPRESENTATION OF MULTISTANZA LIFE HISTORIES IN ECOSPACE MODELS FOR SPATIAL ORGANIZATION OF ECOSYSTEM TROPHIC INTERACTION PATTERNS
Authored by Kenneth A Rose, Carl Walters, Villy Christensen, William Walters
Date Published: 2010
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
The Ecospace model for spatial organization of trophic interactions has
seen limited use for evaluation of policies such as marine protected
areas, partly because of concern about representing key indicator
populations only by spatial biomass distributions. The software has been
improved to include spatial representation of age structure for such
species, by means of the Ecosim ``multistanza{''} population submodel, which assumes similar diet compositions, predation risk, and
vulnerability to fishing over blocks or stanzas of fish ages. A
computationally efficient version of Ecospace now preserves the
multistanza age structure over spatial habitat and ecosystem biomass
maps, evaluating body growth and mortality rates as spatial averages
weighted by relative biomass use of each model spatial cell. A more
computationally intense version divides each multistanza population into
spatial packets (an individual-based model approach) for more precise
analysis of how movement patterns and movement histories over mosaics of
trophic opportunities and risks affect population performance and
variability. The two approaches give surprisingly similar predictions of
abundance patterns over both time and space, agreeing well in case-study
applications to the Gulf of Mexico and California coast with each other
and with nonspatial Ecosim predictions.
Tags
Management
Marine protected areas
Impacts
Population-dynamics
Individuals
Gulf-of-mexico
Fishing effort
Pacific
Shrimp trawl fishery
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