Prey patchiness and larval fish growth and survival: Inferences from an individual-based model
Authored by JA Rice, BH Letcher
Date Published: 1997
DOI: 10.1016/s0304-3800(96)00015-4
Sponsors:
Electric Power Research Institute (EPRI)
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
We used an individual-based simulation model to evaluate how prey
patchiness and fish swimming behavior affect larval fish survival and
mortality source (predation or starvation). Simulations revealed that
cohort survival increased linearly with greater average patch residence
times and that patch residence times for individual fish with different
fates (survived, starved, eaten) diverged substantially during the first
few days of feeding. Further, by examining the interaction of patch
spatial distribution (uniform random versus clumped) with three possible
swimming behaviors, we found that swimming behavior, via its effect on
prey encounter and feeding rates, affected both cohort survival rates
and whether fish died from predation or starvation, but that the spatial
distribution of patches (fine-scale (100s m)) only influenced whether
fish died from predation or starvation. Within a particular patch
spatial arrangement, however, patch intensity (division of food between
patches and non-patches) had a major effect on survival. Except at high
food levels, fish did not survive when there were no patches, suggesting
that average, well-mixed prey densities will not support sufficiently
rapid growth for survival. As patch intensity increased, survival
increased to a maximum and then declined, with peak survival occurring
at higher patch intensity as average food concentration declined.
Finally, the degree of patchiness also determined the intensity of
selection on growth rates. In patchier environments, there was stronger
selection for fast growth rates leading to eight-fold differences in
average cohort growth rates after only three days of growth. In general, survival was not directly related to fast cohort growth the best
survival occurred with high average prey densities and weak patchiness.
Prey patchiness, by influencing the average as well as the variance in
individual growth rates, can have a substantial impact on survival rates
of larval fish cohorts. (C) 1997 Elsevier Science B.V.
Tags
behavior
Predation
Mortality
Mechanisms
Recruitment
Density
Size
Marine fish
Small-scale turbulence
Plankton contact rates