The selection process from larval to juvenile stages of anchovy (Engraulis encrasicolus) in the Bay of Biscay investigated by Lagrangian simulations and comparative otolith growth
Authored by P Lazure, G Allain, P Petitgas, P Grellier
Date Published: 2003
DOI: 10.1046/j.1365-2419.2003.00245.x
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Abstract
The relation between growth and survival was investigated using the
otolith growth data collected during repeated larval surveys ( May -
July) and a juvenile survey ( September) undertaken in 1999 on anchovy
spawning and nursery grounds in the Bay of Biscay ( NE Atlantic). The
paper describes the methodology for reading the larval and juvenile
otoliths, for reconstructing the correspondence in space and time
between juveniles and larvae using Lagrangian simulations, and for
comparing the otolith growth rates among the reconstructed sub-cohorts.
Virtual buoys were released weekly on the grid of a three-dimensional
hydrodynamic model and their trajectories were tracked. The origin of an
individual was determined by selecting the trajectory beginning on its
hatching week and ending at the minimum distance of its sampling
location on the sampling date. Larvae and juveniles with the same
spatio-temporal origin were selected and supposed to belong to the same
sub-cohorts. The surviving juveniles showed faster growth rates during
their larval period than the pool of larvae they were estimated to
originate from, which supports the idea of growth-selective survival.
Alternative interpretations ( transport and gear selectivity) are
discussed. Variations in otolith growth pattern also suggest a higher
juvenile growth over the shelf break than in oceanic waters.
Tags
Individual-based model
Dynamics
Mortality
Recruitment
Life
Size
Marine fish
North-sea
Atlantic
Haddock