Development of a spatially explicit, individual-based model of marine fish early life history
Authored by S Hinckley, BA Megrey, AJ Hermann
Date Published: 1996
DOI: 10.3354/meps139047
Sponsors:
United States National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA)
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Flow charts
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
A growing body of evidence suggests that survival of the planktonic
early life stages of marine fish varies spatially, often in concordance
with mesoscale and larger circulation patterns and with spatial
variation in biotic and abiotic factors. Environmental variation
experienced by individuals may contribute to variance within the
population. Detailed spatial information about life histories cannot be
obtained however, by simply subjecting individuals to identical time
series of environmental variates, or adding random noise to the mean
values of those variates. In this paper, we present a numerical
biophysical model to address this problem. The model combines a
3-dimensional hydrodynamic model with a probabilistic, life-stage model
of young fish. The oceanographic model is an eddy resolving, semi-spectral primitive equation model (SPEM) adapted for Shelikof
Strait and the western Gulf of Alaska, USA. The biological component is
an individual-based model (IBM) which follows each fish through its
first 3 mo of life. The 2 models are coupled via a float-tracking
algorithm, which advects each fish through the model grid based on the
time-varying velocity field derived from the SPEM model, and returns
information to the IBM on any physical variables of interest (e.g.
temperature and salinity) at the individual's new location. These
variables are used to drive biological processes in the IBM. Simulation
1 demonstrates how a probabilistic IBM using Lagrangian temperature
information derived from float tracking can yield significantly
different biological results than the same model with constant
temperature, or a model where all individuals are subjected to
identically increasing time series of temperature. In Simulation 2 we
compare the float tracks and growth of individuals using a scenario of
constant depth for each life stage versus algorithms that include
mechanisms producing variable depth. These mechanisms differ for each
life stage (e.g. changes in depth due to development of eggs, or diel
migration of feeding larvae). This simulation shows that inclusion of
specific mechanisms which determine depth of individual eggs or larvae
at particular periods of their development are important in determining
the direction of horizontal advection, and the history of exposure to
environmental variables for each individual. Simulation 3 compares
modeled distributions of the early life stages with distributions
derived from field surveys.
Tags
growth
Vertical-distribution
Embryonic-development
Ingestion rates
Herring clupea-harengus
Capelin mallotus-villosus
Pollock theragra-chalcogramma
Shelikof strait
Gulf-of-alaska
Larval walleye
pollock