INDIVIDUAL-BASED MODELING OF THE POPULATION-DYNAMICS OF METRIDIA-LUCENS IN THE NORTH-ATLANTIC
Authored by HP Batchelder, R WILLIAMS
Date Published: 1995
DOI: 10.1016/1054-3139(95)80061-1
Sponsors:
United States Office of Naval Research (ONR)
United States National Science Foundation (NSF)
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
An individual-based population dynamics model (IBM) was used to examine
the effect of different behavioral, bioenergetic, and physiological
assumptions on individual growth and development of the copepod, Metridia lucens, in the North Atlantic Ocean. Both intrinsic
(nutritional condition, feeding history, size) and extrinsic
(temperature, food resources) factors that might determine individual
growth and development rates were examined. An advantage of an IBM is
that it allows for inter-individual variability, and can thereby provide
an indication of the range of responses that might arise from natural
variation in environmental conditions. The model is a refinement of an
earlier model that successfully reproduced the observed stage structure
and abundance of Metridia pacifica in the sub-arctic Pacific (Batchelder
and Miller, 1989). Consequently, parameters for the ingestion and
metabolic functions were set initially to those found appropriate for M.
pacifica from previous model studies. Extrinsic forcing variables used
to drive the population model were depth-specific temperature and
chlorophyll a concentration. The model was run in two modes:
chronological and individual. In the former mode, the model used
measured temperature and chlorophyll a data to reproduce the
life-history timing (phenology) and seasonal stage-structure of a M.
lucens population measured in the early 1970s from Ocean Weather Station
India in the North Atlantic. The individual mode was used to examine
variation in growth caused by inter-individual variability in
short-medium term starvation and feeding success. Ingestion, growth, and
development were sensitive to variations in food resources. Factors that
increased consumption rates, such as more effective searching for high
chlorophyll layers, or recent starvation resulting in a `'hunger
response'' in the functional response relation, led to markedly faster
growth and development rates. Model simulations indicate that
inter-individual variability in growth dynamics decreased for copepods
capable of plasticity in the physiological hunger response or more
effective food-searching behavior. Such searching behavior accentuated
already existing inter-annual and intra-annual differences in individual
growth dynamics forced by temperature and food. Conversely, hunger
acclimation reduced intraannual (seasonal) variability and reduced, although only slightly, inter-annual variability in growth dynamics.
These model results highlight the importance of understanding how
copepods respond to environmental conditions. Two methods behavioral
modification and physiological acclimation-by which copepods might
ameliorate low food conditions, lead to different responses to temporal
and spatial variability of resources. (C) 1995 International Council for
the Exploration of the Sea
Tags
Temperature
Life-history
Feeding-behavior
Vertical-distribution
Calanus-pacificus
Body size
Oceanic subarctic pacific
Phytoplankton
concentration
Pseudocalanus
sp
Physio-ecology