Analysis of an estuarine striped bass population: Effects of environmental conditions during early life
Authored by Kenneth A Rose, JH Cowan, WJ Kimmerer, LW Miller
Date Published: 2001
DOI: 10.2307/1353257
Sponsors:
California Urban Water Agencies
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Estuarine fish populations are exposed to a variety of environmental
conditions that cause both shortterm variability and long-term trends in
abundance. We analyzed an extensive data set for striped bass (Morone
saxatilis) in the San Francisco Estuary to refine our understanding of
how environmental variability influences recruitment. We examined the
effects of environmental variability during early life stages on
subsequent recruitment (age 3 yr), and the degree to which conditions in
early fife may have contributed to a long-term decline in abundance of
adult striped bass in the San Francisco Estuary. Survival from egg to
young-of-the-year: varied strongly with freshwater flow; this effect
apparently occurred within the first week or two of life, a time period
that encompasses transport of eggs and larvae from the rivers to rearing
areas and the onset of feeding. The rate of freshwater flow to pumping
facilities that export freshwater from the system had small or sporadic
effects on survival during the first month or two of life. Although many
young striped bass between ages 2 and 8 mo were entrained in export
pumping facilities, the resulting high mortality was unrelated to total
mortality rates determined from field data on young striped bass. Tins
lack of effect was apparently due to strong density-dependent mortality
occurring between ages 1 mo and 3 yr (Kimmerer et al. 2000). The
available data do not support previously suggested relationships between
recruitment and freshwater flow during early life, or between gross
estimates of pesticide input and survival of early life stages. We used
a simple life-cycle model to show that various combined factors could
have led to a decline in adult abundance, particularly a large and
increasing adult mortality, but that events early in life probably did
not contribute substantially to the decline. These results demonstrate
that several decades of monitoring data from numerous life stages are
needed to distinguish among alternative hypotheses about environmental
influences on populations of estuarine fish.
Tags
Individual-based model
Mortality
Recruitment
California
Chesapeake bay
San-joaquin estuary
Morone-saxatilis
Francisco bay
Potamocorbula-amurensis
River flow