Biophysical modelling of larval drift, growth and survival for the prediction of anchovy (Engraulis encrasicolus) recruitment in the Bay of Biscay (NE Atlantic)
Authored by Pierre Petitgas, Gwenhael Allain, Pascal Lazure, Patrick Grellier
Date Published: 2007
DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2419.2007.00443.x
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Abstract
Fish recruitment is the result of the integration of small-scale
processes affecting larval survival over a season and large oceanic
areas. A hydrodynamic model was used to explore and model these
physical-biological interaction mechanisms and then to perform the
integration from individual to population scales in order to provide
recruitment predictions for fisheries management. This method was
applied to the case of anchovy (Engraulis encrasicolus) in the Bay of
Biscay (NE Atlantic). The main data available to investigate survival
mechanisms were past growth (otolith) records of larvae and juveniles
sampled at sea. The drift history of these individuals was reconstructed
by a backtracking procedure using hydrodynamic simulations. The
relationships between (real) growth variation and variations in physical
parameters (estimated by hydrodynamic simulations) were explored along
the individual trajectories obtained. These relationships were then used
to build and adjust individual-based growth and survival models.
Thousands of virtual buoys were released in the hydrodynamic model in
order to reproduce the space-time spawning dynamics. Along the buoy
trajectories (representative of sub-cohorts), the biophysical model was
run to simulate growth and survival as a function of the environment
encountered. The survival rate after 3 months of drift was estimated for
each sub-cohort. The sum of all these survival rates over the season
constituted an annual recruitment index. This index was validated over a
series of recruitment estimations. The modelling choices, model results
and the potential use of the recruitment index for fisheries management
are discussed.
Tags
environment
Spatially explicit
turbulence
Rates
Size
Early-life-history
Juvenile
Basin
Fish early-life
Otoliths