Bio physical modelling of the early life stages of haddock, Melanogrammus aeglefinus, in the North Sea
Authored by MR Heath, A Gallego
Date Published: 1998
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Mathematical description
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Abstract
An individual-based modelling approach was developed to investigate the
spatial and temporal patterns in the recruitment processes of North Sea
haddock, Melanogrammus aeglefinus. The approach was based on the
realization that the survivors to recruitment of an annual cohort are
most probably not drawn at random from the initial population of eggs, but represent the fastest-growing individuals. Individual growth rates
reflect the unique exposure of each larva to the environment along its
drift trajectory. In this context, the environment refers to a wide
range of factors affecting growth such as food, turbulence and
temperature. A combination of a model of egg production by the adult
stock, a particle-tracking scheme, and a model of larval growth and
mortality rate was used to simulate the dispersal trajectories, and the
survival of haddock larvae spawned at different times and locations on
the continental shelf. The particle tracking was driven by flowfields
from a climatological implementation of the Hamburg Shelf-Ocean Model
(HAMSOM) for the North Sea and NE Atlantic. The system was able to
resolve spatial and temporal patterns in the recruitment process and
indicated that the surviving population of larvae was drawn from a
restricted part of the spawning distribution. The results have the
potential to guide the development of future conservation measures in
fisheries management.
Tags
Age
History
Gadus-morhua
Larvae
Captive atlantic cod
Stocks
Egg size
Fecundity