VARIABILITY IN SURVIVAL OF LARVAL FISH - DISENTANGLING COMPONENTS WITH A GENERALIZED INDIVIDUAL-BASED MODEL

Citation
Bh. Letcher et al., VARIABILITY IN SURVIVAL OF LARVAL FISH - DISENTANGLING COMPONENTS WITH A GENERALIZED INDIVIDUAL-BASED MODEL, Canadian journal of fisheries and aquatic sciences, 53(4), 1996, pp. 787-801
Citations number
85
Categorie Soggetti
Marine & Freshwater Biology",Fisheries
ISSN journal
0706652X
Volume
53
Issue
4
Year of publication
1996
Pages
787 - 801
Database
ISI
SICI code
0706-652X(1996)53:4<787:VISOLF>2.0.ZU;2-5
Abstract
Many factors, including intrinsic characteristics of the fish themselv es and extrinsic factors of the biological environment, have the poten tial to regulate mortality rates during the early life of fishes. We u sed a detailed simulation model to rank the effects of variability in these factors on larval and early juvenile survival. Our major finding was that proportional changes in the intrinsic and extrinsic factors in the model had equal effects on cohort survival. Of the intrinsic fa ctors, growth capacity (metabolism and assimilation efficiency), not f oraging ability or starvation resistance, explained the most variance in survival. Of the extrinsic factors, predator size explained 83% of the variability in survival but proportional changes prey availability had only a minor effect. Variability in prey density required a 3-fol d increase to equal the effects of predator size on survival. Despite the important effects of predation pressure on survival, it had only a minor impact on how fish died. Whether fish died from predation or st arvation depended much more on the intrinsic variables related to meta bolism and starvation resistance and on the density of the smallest pr ey type.