A hierarchical Bayesian model for embedding larval drift and habitat models in integrated life cycles for exploited fish
Authored by S Rochette, Pape O Le, J Vigneau, E Rivot
Date Published: 2013
DOI: 10.1890/12-0336.1
Sponsors:
European Union
French National Research Agency (ANR)
Platforms:
R
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
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Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
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Abstract
This paper proposes a hierarchical Bayesian framework for modeling the
life cycle of marine exploited fish with a spatial perspective. The
application was developed for a nursery-dependent fish species, the
common sole (Solea solea), on the Eastern Channel population (Western
Europe). The approach combined processes of different natures and
various sources of observations within an integrated framework for
life-cycle modeling: (1) outputs of an individual-based model for larval
drift and survival that provided yearly estimates of the dispersion and
mortality of eggs and larvae, from spawning grounds to settlement in
several coastal nurseries; (2) a habitat suitability model, based on
juvenile trawl surveys coupled with a geographic information system, to
estimate juvenile densities and surface areas of suitable juvenile
habitat in each nursery sector; (3) a statistical catch-at-age model for
the estimation of the numbers-at-age and the fishing mortality on
subadults and adults. The approach provided estimates of hidden
variables and parameters of key biological significance. A simulation
approach provided insight to the robustness of the approach when only
weak data are available. Estimates of spawning biomass, fishing
mortality, and recruitment were close to the estimations derived from
stock-assessment working groups. In addition, the model quantified
mortality along the life cycle, and estimated site-specific
density-dependent mortalities between settled larvae and age-0 juveniles
in each nursery ground. This provided a better understanding of the
productivity and the specific contribution of each nursery ground toward
recruitment and population renewal. Perspectives include further
development of the modeling framework on the common sole and
applications to other fish species to disentangle the effects of
multiple interacting stress factors (e.g., estuarine and coastal nursery
habitat degradation, fishing pressure) on population renewal and to
develop risk analysis in the context of marine spatial planning for
sustainable management of fish resources.
Tags
time-series
Population-dynamics
Monte-carlo
Density-dependence
North-sea
State-space models
Sole solea-solea
Stock
assessment
Adult-population
Atlantic-ocean