A model approach to identify the spawning grounds and describing the early life history of Northeast Arctic haddock (Melanogrammus aeglefinus)
Authored by Rocio Castano-Primo, Frode Bendiksen Vikebo, Svein Sundby
Date Published: 2014
DOI: 10.1093/icesjms/fsu078
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Abstract
The time-series of recruitment of Northeast Arctic (NEA) haddock
(Melanogrammus aeglefinus) reveals larger interannual fluctuations than
other gadoid species of the region. The position of spawning sites and
the subsequent drift pattern of the offspring may contribute to the
large transport variability, and hence, to the large variation in
recruitment. A mechanistic individual-based biophysical model covering
the egg stage to presettling juveniles, together with observations of
0-group distribution in the Barents Sea and time-series of abundance
estimates are used to analyse these factors. The model indicates that
spawning north of 67 degrees N is favourable for offspring transport
into the nursery grounds in the Barents Sea. The effect of latitude is
stronger than across-shelf position for both growth and transport to the
nursery grounds. The model predicts 0-group haddock outside the standard
sampling area of the annual 0-group survey in the Barents Sea, which
could partially explain the occasional occurrence of increase in cohort
abundance from the 0-group to 1-year stage.
Tags
Recruitment
Temperature
Fish
Growth-model
Georges bank
Vertical-distribution
Cod gadus-morhua
Atlantic cod
Norwegian cod
Larval