A full life cycle and spatially explicit individual-based model for the giant mud crab (Scylla serrata): a case study from a marine protected area
Authored by J -O Meynecke, R G Richards
Date Published: 2014
DOI: 10.1093/icesjms/fst181
Sponsors:
No sponsors listed
Platforms:
R
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Flow charts
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
The giant mud crab (Scylla serrata) is an important fisheries species
throughout southeast Asia and the South Pacific. In Australia, marine
protected areas (MPAs) and fish habitats have been declared specifically
to protect the local populations of S. serrata. The cannibalistic
behaviour of S. serrata coupled with the potential attraction of
increased predators may counteract the effect of excluding fishing from
these areas as a means of increasing the local crab population. The
population dynamics of S. serrata could also be confounded by the
spatio-temporal variability in environmental conditions (e.g. run-off
and temperature). Here, we used a spatially explicit individual-based
model (IBM) to explore the population dynamics of S. serrata in an MPA
located in southern Moreton Bay, Queensland, Australia. This IBM
simulated the life cycle dynamics of individual S. serrata and
integrated the key processes affecting its population dynamics. These
processes include physical transport of the planktonic life stages, movement, growth, metamorphosis, setting, reproduction, spawning, harvesting, and predation. Individual variability was built into the
model to account for demographic variation. The modelled scenarios
indicated that the effect of the different harvest strategies trialled
on the population dynamics after 30 months and the MPA influenced the
number of individuals in the creek system resulting in a partial 35
population increase. Further development and application of this model
has implications for MPAs and catch limits under multiple stressors
including climate change.
Tags
movement
growth
Australia
Population-dynamics
Survival
Mangrove crab
Callinectes-sapidus
Forskal
Portunidae
Juvenile