Prey selection by larval haddock and cod on copepods with species-specific behavior: an individual-based model analysis
Authored by Trond Kristiansen, Colleen M Petrik, Cabell S Davis, R Gregory Lough
Date Published: 2009
DOI: 10.3354/meps08268
Sponsors:
United States National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA)
United States National Science Foundation (NSF)
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
ODD
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Coupled biological-physical models of larval fish have become a widely
used tool for studying recruitment variability. Within these models, foraging components include prey selection as a determinant of food
availability but have not yet considered species-specific escape
behaviors of prey, which can be important in determining capture
success. Furthermore, there has been extensive work on some species
(e.g. cod Gadus morhua), but less on others (e.g. haddock Melanogrammus
aeglefinus). We collected information from the literature on the escape
behaviors of the copepods Calanus finmarchicus, Pseudocalanus spp., Oithona similis, and Centropages typicus, the dominant prey of larval
haddock and cod on Georges Bank (NW Atlantic), for use in a mechanistic
foraging model. The foraging model was coupled to a bioenergetics model
to simulate larval haddock and cod feeding and growth. Larval haddock
and cod demonstrated positive selection of Pseudocalanus spp. and
negative selection of C, finmarchicus based on modeled Chesson's
preference index. Species-specific differences in escape abilities
affected selection more than encounter rate. Prey escape behavior
explained why larval cod rarely feed on C. typicus, although these prey
items are numerous in the water column. Disparities between larval
haddock and cod in their simulated prey selection and growth rates were
the result of different mouth sizes and metabolisms. Simulated haddock
foraging agreed with gut content observations of the size and species
composition of ingested prey. These models are the first to describe
haddock foraging and to include species-specific prey behaviors.
Tags
Foraging behavior
Atlantic cod
Small-scale turbulence
Georges-bank
Gadus-morhua
Early-life stages
Melanogrammus-aeglefinus
Whiting merlangius-merlangus
Marine copepods
Escape behavior