Benthic fisheries ecology in a changing environment: Unraveling process to achieve prediction
                Authored by MJ Butler
                
                    Date Published: 2005
                
                
                    DOI: 10.1051/alr:2005034
                
                
                    Sponsors:
                    
                        United States National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA)
                        
                
                
                    Platforms:
                    
                        No platforms listed
                    
                
                
                    Model Documentation:
                    
                        Other Narrative
                        
                        Flow charts
                        
                
                
                    Model Code URLs:
                    
                        Model code not found
                    
                
                Abstract
                Marine fisheries and the ecosystems that sustain them are increasingly
beset by environmental deterioration, and the problem is particularly
acute in coastal zones where human Populations are increasing. In the
best of circumstances, fishery managers are faced with the multiple, often conflicting, demands of resource users, politicians, and
scientists when considering strategies for resource management. A
further challenge is that management decisions must be made against a
backdrop of a deteriorating environment and the shifting status of
coastal ecosystem integrity. Traditional tools for single-species
management may be inadequate in these settings. Furthermore. the
necessary empirical data to appropriately parameterize models with vital
rates representative of all altered environment are often lacking. Thus, we need approaches that better approximate the complicated dynamics
between environmental conditions, fishery impacts, and multi-species
interactions. Spatially-explicit, indivickial-based simulation modeling
potentially permits this kind of integration, but it has seen limited
use in marine resource management. especially with respect to benthic
resources. My colleagues and I have used this approach, combined with
targeted experimental work, to explore the impacts of nursery habitat
deterioration, coastal freshwater management. and fishery activities oil
Caribbean spiny lobster populations and sponge community structure in
the Florida Keys, Florida (USA). Although not applicable for all
resource management situations, our experiences provide all example of
the potential use of spatially-explicit, individual-based modeling and
targeted empirical science in predicting resource conditions in a
dynamic environment.
                
Tags
                
                    Individual-based model
                
                    Water-quality
                
                    Fish
                
                    Life-history
                
                    Spatially-explicit
                
                    Long-term trends
                
                    Caribbean spiny lobster
                
                    Florida-bay
                
                    Thalassia-testudinum
                
                    Ecosystem
management