Fisheries oceanography and the ecology of early life histories of fishes: a perspective over fifty years
                Authored by JJ Govoni
                
                    Date Published: 2005
                
                
                
                    Sponsors:
                    
                        United States National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA)
                        
                
                
                    Platforms:
                    
                        No platforms listed
                    
                
                
                    Model Documentation:
                    
                        Other Narrative
                        
                
                
                    Model Code URLs:
                    
                        Model code not found
                    
                
                Abstract
                Fisheries oceanography can be defined as the study of the ecology of
fishes in the ocean: so defined, it comprises study at all levels of
ecological organization - organisms, populations, communities, and
ecosystems. The early life history of fishes plays out at each of these
levels of organization. A paradigm developed by Johan Hjort at the turn
of the twentieth century, along with postulates by Hjort and many of his
colleagues that followed, came to guide much of fisheries oceanography
through the ensuing hundred years. Research themes that address these
postulates can be roughly partitioned as the study of the physiological
ecology of the eggs and larvae of fishes in the sea, and the study of
the abundance and distribution of fish propagules. Using case studies of
organisms and physical processes, considerable progress has been made in
understanding the causes of variation in population recruitment, defined
either by stage-based models and simulated by individual-based models.
Some of this progress has been published in Scientia Marina, or its
predecessor Investigacion Pesquera. The causes of variation, however, are interactive and operative at differing, yet often overlapping, spatial and temporal scales. Difficulty in matching spatial scales that
typically differ by an order of magnitude or more, will continue to
trouble the resolution of causes of population recruitment. Moreover, study of the causes of variation in recruitment has not led to
predictive power at an annual scale. Prediction at a decadal scale, using community (or more appropriately larval fish assemblages) and
ecosystem level dynamics, is more hopeful.
                
Tags
                
                    Coral-reef fish
                
                    Marine fish
                
                    Gulf-of-mexico
                
                    Cod gadus-morhua
                
                    Larval fish
                
                    Scotian shelf
                
                    Flounder paralichthys-olivaceus
                
                    Anchovy
engraulis-japonicus
                
                    Growth-selective predation
                
                    Nutritional condition