A new hypothesis concerning the nature of small pelagic fish clusters An individual-based modelling study of Sardinella aurita dynamics off West Africa
Authored by Fur Jean Le, Patrick Simon
Date Published: 2009
DOI: 10.1016/j.ecolmodel.2009.02.012
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Abstract
Coastal populations of small pelagic fish display nested aggregation
levels. Above the level of the school structure, clusters are observed
the nature of which has not been definitively determined. We
hypothesized that these clusters corresponded to a materialisation of
the microcohorts originating from successive spawnings of fish
populations in their vital domain.
A candidate individual-based model was developed to investigate this
hypothesis. This model is based on pattern-oriented modelling of a
concrete documented case: the dynamics of the round sardinella
(Sardinella aunita) population living off the West African coasts and
subject to environmental fluctuations caused by seasonal upwelling. The
simulated agents were round sardinella microcohorts situated and moving
in a discretised physical environment. The combined effects of
environmental forcing (temperature, wind, retention) and inner
biological dynamics (reproduction, growth and mortality, competition)
condition the dynamics of this population.
The modelled behaviour generated realistic dynamic patterns (population
distribution, spawning zones, periods and plasticity, biomass
fluctuations), which were obtained simultaneously and successfully
compared with observations. The steady-state number of microcohorts
obtained after simulation convergence was similar to the number of
clusters observed in situ in this area for this population.
The realism and diversity of the patterns simultaneously simulated
suggested the cluster-microcohort equivalence hypothesis as a candidate
framework accounting for the origin of the clusters observed in situ.
Within this preliminary exploration, we discuss the consistency of the
hypothesis and the accuracy of the model. If the correspondence between
clusters and microcohorts proves to be real, it may be transient and
progressively modified by other environmental factors. If stable over
time, as simulated in the model, the number of observed clusters should
be related to the number of spawning events in the species' lifetime.
(C) 2009 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Tags
pattern
systems
Ecosystem
Recruitment
Life-history
Ecological theory
Southern benguela
Anchovy engraulis-capensis
Emergent
properties
Schooling behavior