An individual-based model of bay anchovy population dynamics in the mesohaline region of Chesapeake Bay
Authored by Kenneth A Rose, JH Cowan, ME Clark, ED Houde, SB Wang
Date Published: 1999
DOI: 10.3354/meps185113
Sponsors:
United States Department of Energy (DOE)
United States National Science Foundation (NSF)
Electric Power Research Institute (EPRI)
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Flow charts
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Bay anchovy Anchoa mitichilli population dynamics in the mesohaline
region of Chesapeake Bay are described and analyzed with an
individual-based model. The model begins with spawning by individual
females and simulates the daily growth and mortality of each female's
progeny as they develop through the egg, yolk-sac larva, (feeding)
larval, juvenile, and adult stages in a single, well-mixed compartment.
The model runs for 50 yr. Eggs and yolk-sac larvae develop at rates
dependent on temperature, and die at fixed daily rates. All feeding
individuals (larvae, juveniles, and adults) consume zooplankton and grow
according to defined bioenergetics relationships. Encounters, attacks
and captures of prey, and the probability that feeding individuals will
die are treated stochastically using Monte Carlo techniques. Net
immigration of spawners into the modelled box each year is simulated in
2 ways: multiplier of survivors and as a constant number. Model
predictions of stage-specific growth and survival rates, and diets were
similar for multiplier and constant immigration simulations, and both
were similar to observed values. Density-dependent growth of larvae and
juveniles led to a negative relationship between mean length and number
of recruits and to density-dependent survival of larvae and juveniles.
Density-dependent growth was due to anchovy consumption reducing prey
densities, and not due to temperature effects on numbers surviving and
growth. First-year survivorship was lower in years of high egg
production than in years of low egg production. Larval growth and
survival rates were positively related to recruitment, but the reverse
was true for juveniles. Years of high recruitment were not years of high
first-feeder production, but rather were years of high larval survival.
The model simulates a single spatial box with a forced net immigration
of spawners and assumes density-independent spawning and mortality
processes. The model quantifies the basic processes leading to
recruitment of bay anchovy and sets the stage to explore potential
compensatory responses of anchovy.
Tags
Life-history
Marine fishes
Narragansett bay
Rhode-island
Reactive distance
Comparative
energetics
Mitchilli larvae
Yolk-sac larvae
Bluegill lepomis-macrochirus
Production-rates