INDIVIDUAL-BASED MODEL OF STREAM-RESIDENT RAINBOW-TROUT AND BROOK CHAR - MODEL DESCRIPTION, CORROBORATION, AND EFFECTS OF SYMPATRY AND SPAWNING SEASON DURATION

Authors
Citation
Me. Clark et Ka. Rose, INDIVIDUAL-BASED MODEL OF STREAM-RESIDENT RAINBOW-TROUT AND BROOK CHAR - MODEL DESCRIPTION, CORROBORATION, AND EFFECTS OF SYMPATRY AND SPAWNING SEASON DURATION, Ecological modelling, 94(2-3), 1997, pp. 157-175
Citations number
64
Categorie Soggetti
Ecology
Journal title
ISSN journal
03043800
Volume
94
Issue
2-3
Year of publication
1997
Pages
157 - 175
Database
ISI
SICI code
0304-3800(1997)94:2-3<157:IMOSRA>2.0.ZU;2-Y
Abstract
An individual-based model of the population dynamics of sympatric rain bow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) and brook char (Salvelinus fontinalis) is described and analyzed. The model simulates daily growth, mortalit y, movement, and spawning over the full life cycle of each species for 100 years in a compartmentalized, hypothetical stream configured for the southern Appalachian mountains, USA. Egg and alevin development is temperature-dependent with mortality having constant, spatial, and te mperature-dependent components. Daily growth of fry, juveniles, and ad ults is based on bioenergetics and consumption of drift prey. Mortalit y rate of fry through adults decreases with length. Model predictions of densities, growth, age, and size structure were similar to those ob served in southern Appalachian streams. Five different conditions were simulated to explore the population dynamics and competition between the two species: (1) sympatric populations (baseline), (2) allopatric brook char, (3) allopatric rainbow trout, (4) and (5) sympatric popula tions with reduced or increased spawning season durations. Results ind icated that density-dependence mainly operated during the fry and juve nile stages. Brook char were more affected by interspecific competitio n than rainbow trout, and crowding of fry negatively affected brook ch ar (with little effect on rainbow trout), whereas low fry density favo red brook char. (C) 1997 Elsevier Science B.V.