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Published byRandell Hunter Modified over 9 years ago
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Lecture 2 review Compensatory rate change is the ecological basis for sustainable populations and harvesting Compensatory change may involve –Increases in adult survival rate at low N –Increases in juvenile survival rate at low N –Increases in growth and mean fecunity at low N Generally mean fecundity decreases dramatically in harvested populations, so compensation is mainly in juvenile survival A good measure of compensation in juvenile survival is the “Goodyear compensation ratio” K=(maximum survival rate)/(survival rate in unharvested population)
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Limits to compensatory responses Most populations exhibit high juvenile survival at very low densities But occasionally (5-10%?) compensation fails at low densities, leading to low equilibrium or extinction N SJ N -Allee effect (eggs don’t get fertilized, eg scallops); rare -Cultivation/depensation (competitors/predators of juveniles increase when N is low, eg bass-bluegill) -Trophic cascades (green water/clear water states) -Botsford’s effect (size dependent cannibalism) (Invasive species have to exhibit this ability)
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Is the Beverton-Holt invariant M/K=1.6 a valid generalization based on your analysis of the data in Fishbase?
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Life history trajectories Whenever you handle a fish, ALWAYS ask yourself these questions: –How old is it? –Where was it spawned? –Where will it spawn?
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Life history stanzas (partitions of the life history trajectory) The eggie Larval drift, density- independent mortality Juvenile migration First juvenile nursery area: small, strong density-dependence in mortality Spread into larger juvenile nursery area(s), mortality much lower Adult foraging areas, most often with complex seasonal migration patterns Spawning migration Fractal, complex diurnal movement
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Characteristics of LHT There is typically very strong selection for behaviors that take fish back to spawn in the places where they were successfully produced (this is not just a salmon thing) Seasonal migrations become more pronounced as fish grow Time Random model Distance from tagging site Migration model Distance from tagging site Time
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Characteristics of LHT Natural mortality rates vary as M=k/(body length), starting at a few percent per day and often falling to a few percent per year Body growth typically follows a vonBertalanffy length curve of the form length=L [1-e -K(a-ao) ] Sometimes there is a “kink” in the growth curve, with small juveniles either showing extra fast growth (if they seek warm microhabitats) or extra slow growth (if they face very high predation risk).
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Characteristics of LHT Maturation typically occurs at 50%-70% of maximum body length, with fecundity then being proportional to body weight But some fish like these New Zealand brown trout practically stop growing at maturity, and make massive (45%) investments in eggs (Hayes et al TAFS 2000)
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Representing LHT in models Age structure accounting (block trajectory by even age intervals) Stanza structure accounting (Ecosim) Individual-based models (track movement) [N 1 N 2 N 3 …] t [N 1 N 2 N 3 …] t+1 (easy in spreadsheets) X,Y positions and fates of large sample of individuals
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