Modeling effects of increased larval mortality on bay anchovy population dynamics in the mesohaline Chesapeake Bay: evidence for compensatory reserve
Authored by Kenneth A Rose, JH Cowan, ED Houde, SB Wang, J Young
Date Published: 1999
DOI: 10.3354/meps185133
Sponsors:
United States Department of Energy (DOE)
United States National Science Foundation (NSF)
Electric Power Research Institute (EPRI)
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
We applied an individual-based population model to examine the potential
compensatory scope of the bay anchovy Anchoa mitchilli in Chesapeake
Bay. Model simulations were analyzed to estimate: (1) how losses of
individuals in different life stages affect year-class production; (2)
the changes needed in individual processes and, simultaneously in
multiple processes, to offset a 50\% increase in larval-stage mortality;
and (3) population responses to increasing larval-stage mortality under
conditions of presumed high compensatory potential. We hypothesize that, in response to lower densities, the bay anchovy population could
compensate for increased larval mortality through increased growth
rates, increased allocation of energy to reproduction, or reduced
predation mortality as predators target other species. Simulation
results indicate that late-larval and juvenile bay anchovy may be able
to consume a significant fraction of their zooplankton prey, suggesting
that anchovy is at abundances that can cause density-dependent growth in
the Chesapeake Bay. However, density-dependent effects on prey resources
alone had a limited buffering effect against a 50\% reduction in
larval-stage survival. The potential effect of losses of larvae on
future production of a year class depended upon when during the larval
stage individuals are removed from the population. Modeled alone, large
changes in spawning intensity (no. of batches and eggs per batch), egg
survival, or mortality of juveniles and adults were required to offset
increased larval mortality. When all processes were varied
simultaneously, much smaller changes were required. Under a high
compensation scenario, there was a strong dome-shaped response in adult
production potential to increased larval mortality, such that highest
adult production occurred when survival rate of larvae was reduced by as
much as 60\%. While the information presently available to examine
density-dependent population responses in bay anchovy is limiting, the
modeled results indicate that the bay anchovy population in Chesapeake
Bay potentially can regulate its abundance through simultaneous shifts
in processes believed to be sensitive to population density.
Tags
Marine fish
Seed production
Density-dependent mortality
Cod
gadus-morhua
Striped bass
Egg size
Americanus reproductive success
Red-sea bream
Solea-solea l
Recruitment
variability