Individual-Based Modeling of Delta Smelt Population Dynamics in the Upper San Francisco Estuary III. Effects of Entrainment Mortality and Changes in Prey
Authored by Kenneth A Rose, Wim J Kimmerer
Date Published: 2018
DOI: 10.1002/tafs.10015
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Abstract
We used an individual-based model, developed previously for the
endangered, endemic Delta Smelt Hypomesus transpacificus, to investigate
two factors widely believed to affect its abundance in the San Francisco
Estuary: entrainment in large water diversion facilities and declines
and species shifts in their zooplankton prey. Previous analyses
suggested that these factors had substantial effects on the Delta Smelt
population, although evidence is accumulating that other factors, such
as contaminants and predation, are also having effects. Simulations were
performed for 1995-2005 with either entrainment mortality set to zero or
zooplankton biomasses replaced with values sampled from pre-decline
years. The detailed individual-based and spatial model output was
summarized as the annual finite population growth rate (). Eliminating
entrainment mortality increased the geometric mean by 39\% through
increased survival of larvae and adults. Substituting historical food
for present-day food resulted in variable annual values with a geometric
mean that was 41\% greater than the baseline value (14-81\% across 10
alternative food scenarios). Historical food caused higher juvenile
consumption and growth rates, leading to larger recruits, earlier
maturity, and higher individual fecundity. These results were robust to
four sets of simulations using alternative formulations for density
dependence, mortality, maturity, and larval growth.
Tags
Predation
habitat
zooplankton
California
Life-history
Food limitation
Pelagic fishes
Striped
bass
Joaquin delta
Sacramento