Effects of individual habitat selection io a heterogeneous environment on fish cohort survivorship: A modelling analysis
Authored by Kenneth A Rose, JA Tyler
Date Published: 1997
DOI: 10.2307/5970
Sponsors:
United States Department of Energy (DOE)
United States National Science Foundation (NSF)
Electric Power Research Institute (EPRI)
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
1. This work investigates how cohort survivorship predictions are
affected by the rules used for moving individuals between habitats in a
variety of prey and predator environments.
2. We present an individual-based simulation model of the survival of a
juvenile, planktivorous fish cohort over the growing season in a
spatially explicit environment. The model represents the environment as
a 10 x 10 grid of cells (habitats) that can wry in food density and
predator number.
3. Juvenile fish begin with identical characteristics, then grow, move
between cells, and die based on their individual experiences. Juveniles
use one of four moving-between-cell (cell-departure) rules. random, maximize growth, minimize mortality risk, and minimize the ratio of
mortality risk to growth. The model includes size-dependent rules for
juvenile consumption, encounters between juveniles and predators, and
juvenile death. Predators have three different distributions:
uncorrelated, correlated with zooplankton, and correlated with
juveniles.
4. Three simulation experiments were conducted to address how cohort
survivorship is affected by the environment's spatial heterogeneity, the
cell-departure rule of juveniles, and the initial cohort number
(Experiment 1); which cell-departure rule individual juveniles should
use (Experiment 2); and how survivorship predictions differ between this
explicit, spatially heterogeneous model and a similar, spatially
homogeneous model (Experiment 3).
5. Experiment 1 showed that predator distribution, juvenile number, zooplankton density and cell-departure rule had important effects on
cohort survivorship. Experiment 2 showed that no single cell-departure
rule was consistently the evolutionarily stable strategy (ESS), and that
survivorship of cohorts using the ESS cell-departure rule(s) was lower
than that of cohorts using the eel-departure rule with the highest
single-year survivorship. Experiment 3 showed that density effects on
juvenile survivorship can be much greater in a spatially explicit model, with individuals using fitness-based cell-departure rules than in an
analogous, spatially homogeneous model.
6. The results of this work indicate that the cell-departure rule used
by individuals can have an important effect on cohort survivorship. In
addition, none of the state- and time-independent cell-departure rules
investigated was an ESS, suggesting that such static rules may not be an
appropriate mechanism for modelling individual habitat selection in a
dynamic environment.
Tags
ideal free distribution
Population-dynamics
Patchy environment
Community structure
Spatial variation
Perch perca-flavescens
Predator
avoidance
Young yellow perch
Traeth melynog
Travel costs