Population dynamics model of the hard clam, Mercenaria mercenaria: Development of the age- and length-frequency structure of the population
Authored by Eric N Powell, John M Klinck, Eileen E Hofmann, John N Kraeuter, Ray E Grizzle, Stuart C Buckner, V Monica Bricelj
Date Published: 2006
DOI: 10.2983/0730-8000(2006)25[417:apdmot]2.0.co;2
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Abstract
An individual-based model was developed to simulate growth of the hard
clam, Mercenaria mercenaria, in response to temperature, salinity and
food supply conditions. Unique characteristics of the model are that:
(1) length and tissue weight are related only by condition index, so
that weight, up to a point, can vary independently of length, and (2)
age is decoupled from length. Tissue weight changes result from the
difference in assimilation and respiration. Changes in hard clam
condition are determined from a standard length-weight relationship for
average hard clam growth. Changes in hard clam length (growth) occur
only when condition index is greater than zero, which happens when
excess weight for a given length is attained. No change in length occurs
if condition index is zero (mean case) or negative (less weight than
expected at a given length). This model structure resolves limitations
that accompany models used to simulate the growth and development of
shellfish populations. The length-frequency distribution for a cohort
was developed from the individual-based model through simulation of a
suite of genotypes with varying physiological capabilities. Hard clam
populations were then formed by the yearly concatenation of cohorts with
partially independent trajectories that are produced by cohort- and
population-based processes. Development and verification of the hard
clam model was done using long-term data sets from Great South Bay, New
York that have been collected by the Town of Islip, New York. The
ability to separately track length and age in the simulations allowed
derivation of a general mathematical relationship for describing
age-length relationships in hard clam populations. The mathematical
relationship, which is based on a twisted bivariate Gaussian
distribution, reproduces the features of age-length distributions
observed for hard clam populations. The parameters obtained from fitting
the twisted bivariate Gaussian to simulated hard clam length-frequency
distributions obtained for varying conditions yield insight into the
growth and mortality processes and population-dependent processes, compensatory and otherwise, that structured the population. This in turn
provides a basis for development of theoretical models of population
age-length compositions. The twisted bivariate Gaussian also offers the
possibility of rapidly and inexpensively developing age-length keys, used to convert length-based data to age-based data, by permitting a
relatively few known age-length pairs to be expanded into the full age-
and length-frequency structure of the population.
Tags
Density
Body-size
Mytilus-edulis
Oyster crassostrea-gigas
Galveston bay
Natural
mortality
Mussel
Possible available food
Growth curve
Bivalve