Responses of European anchovy vital rates and population growth to environmental fluctuations: An individual-based modeling approach
Authored by H Pethybridge, D Roos, V Loizeau, L Pecquerie, C Bacher
Date Published: 2013
DOI: 10.1016/j.ecolmodel.2012.11.017
Sponsors:
French National Research Agency (ANR)
Platforms:
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Model Documentation:
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Abstract
A size-structured, bioenergetics model was implemented to examine the
effects of short-term environmental changes on European anchovy, Engraulis encrasicolus, in the North-western Mediterranean Sea. The
model approach was based on Dynamic Energy Budget (DEB) theory and
details the acquisition and allocation of energy (J d(-1)) during an
organisms' full life-cycle. Model calibration was achieved using
biometric data collected from the Gulf of Lions between 2002 and 2011.
Bioenergetics simulations successfully captured ontogenetic and seasonal
growth patterns, including active growth in spring/summer, loss of mass
in autumn/winter and the timing and amplitude of multi-batch spawning
events. Scenario analysis determined that vital rates (growth and
fecundity) were highly sensitive to short-term environmental changes.
The DEB model provided a robust foundation for the implementation of an
individual-based population model (IBM) in which we used to test the
responses of intrinsic and density-independent population growth rates
(r) to observed and projected environmental variability. IBM projections
estimate that r could be reduced by as much as 15\% (relative to that
estimated under mean conditions) due to either a 5\% (0.8 degrees C)
drop in temperature (due to a reduced spawning duration), a 18\% (25 mg
zooplankton m(-3)) depletion in food supply, a 30\% increase in egg
mortality rates, or with the phytoplankton bloom peaking 5 weeks earlier
(in late-February/Winter). The sensitivity of r to short-term (1 year)
and long-term (4-10 year) environmental changes were similar, highlighting the importance of first-year spawners. In its current form, the models presented here could be incorporated into spatially-explicit, higher-trophic (predator-prey and end-to-end ecosystem), larval-dispersal and toxicokinetic models or adapted to other
short-lived foraging fish (clupeid) species. (C) 2012 Elsevier B.V. All
rights reserved.
Tags
Phytoplankton
Sensitivity-analysis
Life-history
Dynamics model
Small pelagic fish
Engraulis-encrasicolus-l.
Larval growth
Western mediterranean-sea
Daily
egg-production
Cadiz sw spain