A multi-agent ecosystem model for studying changes in a tropical estuarine fish assemblage within a marine protected area
Authored by Timothee Brochier, Jean Marc Ecountin, Morais Luis Tito de, David M Kaplan, Raymond Lae
Date Published: 2013
DOI: 10.1051/alr/2012028
Sponsors:
French National Research Agency (ANR)
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Flow charts
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
As marine protected areas (MPAs) are increasingly being utilised as a
tool for fishery management, their impact on the food web needs to be
fully understood. However, little is known about the effect of MPAs on
fish assemblages, especially in the presence of different life history
and ecological traits. Modelling the observed changes in fish population
structures may provide a mechanistic understanding of fish assemblage
dynamics. In addition, modelling allows a quantitative estimate of MPA
spill-over. To achieve this purpose, we adapted an existing ecosystem
model, OSMOSE (Object-oriented simulator of marine biodiversity
exploitation), to the specific case of the presence of fish with
multiple life histories. The adapted model can manage 4 main categories
of life history identified in an estuary MPA: fish that (1) spend their
entire life cycle locally, (2) are present only as juveniles, (3) enter
the area as juveniles and stay permanently except during reproduction
periods, which occur outside the estuary, and (4) are present
occasionally and for a short time for foraging purposes. To take into
account these specific life-history traits, the OSMOSE code was
modified. This modelling approach was developed in the context of the
Bamboung Bolong MPA, located in a mangrove area in the Sine-Saloum
Delta, Senegal. This was the ideal case to develop our approach as there
has been scientific monitoring of the fish population structure inside
the MPA before fishery closure, providing a reference state, and
continuous monitoring since the closure. Ecologically similar species
were pooled by trophic traits into 15 groups that represented 97\% of
the total biomass. Lower trophic levels (LTL) were represented by 6
compartments. The biomass of the model species was calibrated to
reproduce the reference situation before fishery closure. Model
predictions of fish assemblage changes after fishery closure
corresponding to the Bamboung MPA creation scenario were compared to
field observations; in most cases the model reproduces observed changes
in biomass (at least in direction). We suggest the existence of a
``sanctuary effect{''}, that was not taken into account in the model, this could explain the observed increase in biomass of top predators not
reproduced by the model. Finally, the annual MPA fish spill-over was
estimated at 11 tons (similar to 33\% of the fish biomass) from the
model output, mainly due to diffusive effects.
Tags
Individual-based model
Senegal
Management
Dynamics
Diversity
fisheries
Size
Life-history
Reserves
Matter