Drift, growth, and survival of larval Northeast Arctic cod with simple rules of behaviour
Authored by Christian Jorgensen, Oyvind Fiksen, Trond Kristiansen, Frode Vikebo
Date Published: 2007
DOI: 10.3354/meps06979
Sponsors:
United States National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA)
Norwegian Research Council (NRF)
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Due to vertical variations in ocean circulation, larval Northeast Arctic
cod Gadus morhua may influence their own drift routes by migrating
vertically. By coupling a larval individual-based model and a general
circulation model, we simulated larval vertical positioning according to
simple rules based on individual risk sensitivity. This enabled us to
investigate how larval growth, survival and horizontal distribution vary
between individuals following different rules. Immediate depth selection
follows from the rules, with implications for environmental exposure and
instantaneous growth rates. The behavioural rules had long-term and
large-scale consequences, since vertical positioning influences the
drift trajectory of the larva, and thereby the physical environment the
larva experiences along its way. Two alternative rule formulations were
explored, each containing the full range of strategies, from maximising
immediate growth to maximising immediate survival. Fitness was defined
as accumulated survival probability up to 18 mm for larvae released at 2
important spawning grounds in the Lofoten area. Both rules gave better
fitness than for individuals drifting at fixed depths. The most
successful individuals performed active vertical migration and had an
intermediate risk sensitivity. When risk sensitivity was allowed to
change with ontogeny, larvae that first emphasised growth and then
changed to intermediate risk sensitivity were the most successful ones, although improvements were minor compared to fixed sensitivities. The 2
spawning grounds led to slight differences in fitness, but success as a
result of risk sensitivity was similar at both, suggesting that optimal
larval strategies may be robust across different spawning grounds.
Tags
Individual-based model
Life-history
Spatially-explicit
Vertical-distribution
Atlantic cod
Norwegian cod
Gadus-morhua
Southern
benguela
Marine populations
Dependent growth