Incorporating ecological process and environmental change into spiny lobster population models using a spatially-explicit, individual-based approach
Authored by MJ Butler
Date Published: 2003
DOI: 10.1016/j.fishres.2003.09.007
Sponsors:
United States National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA)
Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission
Platforms:
C++
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Marine fisheries and the ecosystems that sustain them are increasingly
beset by environmental deterioration, yet traditional fishery models
used for stock prediction typically handle these dynamics poorly if at
all. To do so requires the integration of spatio-temporal change in
environmental quality and its subsequent effects on habitat suitability
and life history dynamics. Spatially-explicit, individual-based
simulation models are particularly well suited to this task and, although they are seeing increased use in fisheries ecology and
management, this approach has seen limited application in crustacean
fisheries. In 1993. we began development of a spatially-explicit
individual-based model (IBM) describing the recruitment of Caribbean
spiny lobster (Panulirus argus) in the Florida Keys, Florida (USA) to
investigate the impact of regional changes in environmental quality, habitat structure and postlarval supply on lobster recruitment. The
shallow coastal waters of the Florida Keys ecosystem have experienced an
unprecedented series of environmental perturbations over the past
decade. Seagrass die-offs, cyanobacteria blooms, sponge die-offs and
dramatic changes in salinity have occurred and these potentially impact
the recruitment of spiny lobsters in the region via both direct and
indirect means. Here I provide an overview of the unique approach that
we have used to examine these dynamics, an approach that links
environmental events that occur on large scales (e.g. changes in habitat
structure and salinity) with their population-level consequences for
lobsters via impacts that operate on the individual-level. Although not
applicable in all situations, spatially-explicit IBMs should see wider
use in crustacean fishery applications because of both the ecological
insight they yield and their ability to integrate data across
hierarchical scales of organization. (C) 2003 Published by Elsevier B.V.
Tags
Dynamics
Mortality
habitat
Recruitment
Quality
Fish
Life-history
Transport
Panulirus-argus
Florida bay