LINKING LIFE-HISTORY THEORY, ENVIRONMENTAL SETTING, AND INDIVIDUAL-BASED MODELING TO COMPARE RESPONSES OF DIFFERENT FISH SPECIES TO ENVIRONMENTAL-CHANGE
Authored by Donald L DeAngelis, Kenneth A Rose, W VanWinkle, BJ Shuter, SW CHRISTENSEN, KO WINEMILLER, RG OTTO
Date Published: 1993
DOI: 10.1577/1548-8659(1993)122<0459:llhtes>2.3.co;2
Sponsors:
United States Department of Energy (DOE)
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Flow charts
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
We link life history theory, environmental setting, and individual-based
modeling to compare the responses of two fish species to environmental
change. Life history theory provides the framework for selecting
representative species, and in combination with information on important
environmental characteristics, it provides the framework for predicting
the results of model simulations. Individual-based modeling offers a
promising tool for integrating and extrapolating our mechanistic
understanding of reproduction, growth, and mortality at the individual
level to population-level responses such as size-frequency distributions
and indices of year-class strength. Based on the trade-offs between life
history characteristics of striped bass Morone saxatilis and smallmouth
bass Micropterus dolomieu and differences in their respective
environments, we predicted that young-of-year smallmouth bass are likely
to demonstrate a greater compensatory change in growth and mortality
than young-of-year striped bass in response to changes in density of
early life stages and turnover rates of zooplankton prey. We tested this
prediction with a simulation experiment. The pattern of model results
was consistent with our expectations: by the end of the first growing
season, compensatory changes in length and abundance of juveniles were
more pronounced for smallmouth bass than for striped bass. The results
also highlighted the dependence of model predictions on the interplay
between density of larvae and juveniles and characteristics of their
zooplankton prey.
Tags
behavior
Management
Exploitation
patterns
Recruitment
Populations
Size
Smallmouth bass
Styles
American fishes