Coupling of an individual-based population dynamic model of Calanus finmarchicus to a circulation model for the Georges Bank region
Authored by F Carlotti, DR Lynch, CB Miller, W Gentleman, CVW Lewis
Date Published: 1998
DOI: 10.1046/j.1365-2419.1998.00072.x
Sponsors:
European Union
United States National Science Foundation (NSF)
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
An individual-based life history and population dynamic model for the
winter-spring dominant copepod of the subarctic North Atlantic, Calanus
Finmarchicus, is coupled with a regional model of advection for the Gulf
of Maine and Georges Bank. Large numbers of vectors, each representing
individual copepods with elements for age, stage, ovarian status and
other population dynamic variables, are carried in a computation through
hourly time steps. Each vector is updated at each time step according to
development rate and reproductive functions derived from experimental
data. Newly spawned eggs are each assigned new vectors as needed. All
vectors are subject to random mortality. Thus, Loch life history
progression and population dynamics of C. finmarchius are represented
for the temperatures in the Gulf of Maine-Georges Bank region in the
active season. All vectors include elements representing depth, latitude
and longitude. This allows coupling of the population dynamics to the
tide- and wind-driven Dartmouth model of New England regional
circulation. Summary data from the physical model are used to advance
vectors from resting-stock locations in Gulf of Maine basins through two
generations to sites of readiness for return to rest. Supply of Calanus
stock to Georges Bank comes from all of the gulf and from the Scotian
Shelf. The top of the bank is stocked from western gulf basins; the
North-east Peak is stocked from Georges Basin and the Scotian Shelf. All
sources contribute to stock that accumulates in the SCOPEX gyre off the
north-west shoulder of Georges Bank, explaining the high abundance
recurrently seen in that region. There is some return of resting stock
to Wilkinson Basin in the western gulf, but other basins must mostly be
restocked from upstream sources to the north-east.
Tags
biomass
Basins
Abundance
Marine copepod
Egg-production
Gulf
Maine
Great south channel
Nova-scotia shelf
Haddock larvae