Optimal energy allocation to ovaries after spawning
Authored by DB Bunnell, EA Marschall
Date Published: 2003
Sponsors:
United States Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS or FWS)
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
For iteroparous organisms in which fecundity is positively related to
body size, a trade-off exists between allocation of energy to gonads, thus ensuring some reproductive output, and allocation to somatic
growth, thus increasing potential fecundity in the future. This
trade-off can influence several life-history patterns, including when, for organisms that grow after maturity, allocation to gonads begins
following the previous reproductive event. White crappie Pomoxis
annularis, a spring-spawning freshwater fish, began allocating energy to
ovaries in autumn at the expense of continued somatic growth and higher
potential fecundity. Within five populations, the amount of early
allocation varied between years. We combined dynamic programming with an
individual-based model to determine how summer and spring feeding
conditions interact to influence when allocation to reproduction should
begin. Model results indicated that autumn allocation to ovaries was in
response to future spring feeding conditions rather than recent summer
feeding conditions. At least a 10\% probability of poor spring feeding
conditions resulted in ovary investment patterns that matched field
observations. The model was unable to explain the inter-annual variation
in autumn energy observed in the field. Early allocation of energy to
ovaries is probably an evolutionary adaptation to the possibility of
poor spring feeding conditions.
Tags
patterns
growth
Life-history
Reproduction
Walleye
Optimal resource-allocation
Prey availability
Annual plants
Lake-erie
Tactics