1 / 10

Lecture 1 review

Lecture 1 review. Why managers cannot avoid making predictions Approaches to prediction Components of population change What is a “population”? How natural populations behave. The ecological basis of sustainable production and harvest.

Télécharger la présentation

Lecture 1 review

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Lecture 1 review • Why managers cannot avoid making predictions • Approaches to prediction • Components of population change • What is a “population”? • How natural populations behave

  2. The ecological basis of sustainable production and harvest • Population change can always be represented as(New N)=(Survivors)+(Surviving recruits) • Or in shorthand:Nt+1=SAtNt+SJtftNt- SA =survival rate of 1+ year old fish- SJ =survival rate from egg to age 1- f =eggs per age 1+ year old fish • Note the balance relationship can be written as: Nt+1=(SAt+SJt ft)Nt = rtNt where rt=SAt+SJt ft

  3. Slope=rt Nt+1=Nt Nt+1 Nt What if you plot Nt+1 against Nt, ie if you assume one predictor of next year’s population is this year’s population? What if your data indicate that the slope doesn’t change, i.e. r is constant or at least independent of Nt?

  4. As you saw in the last tutorial, complete independence of rt from Nt always leads to predictions of exponential increase or decline, never to sustainable N • So the ecological basis of sustainable production is change in r with N • Which component(s) of r change with N in some way so as to compensate for harvest effects? • SA? Goes down as harvest rate increases • SJ? Goes up, often dramatically! • f? Often goes down as harvest rate increases (smaller, less fecund fish)

  5. What happens when a population is fished down? • There can be ecosystem-scale response • Reduced predator abundance (SA,SJ) • Increased prey abundance (f, growth and SJ) • But more commonly there is increase in fine-scale (foraging arena) food availability • Reduced foraging time for same growth (SJ) • Increased growth rate (SJ especially overwinter, f) • And sometimes other resources are in short supply • Hiding places for juveniles (SJ) • Higher quality foraging sites (SJ, f) (most fish show strong dominance hierarchies)

  6. Fitness-maximizing strategies for adjusting feeding activity lead to density-dependence in survival, growth rates

  7. A point about average rates like SA and mean fecundity f • When we say that a proportion SAt of Nt survives, do we mean that every fish that is a member of Nt has the same probability SAt of survival? NO! • Nt typically consists of a heterogeneous collection of individuals that we can classify by attributes like age. Natural survival rate typically increases with age (M=k/length; Lorenzen, McGurk) • If Nt=N1+N2+N3+… and if survival rates by age are SA1, SA2, SA3,… then (Survivors)=N1SA1+N2SA2+N3SA3+… =Nt(P1SA1+P2SA2+P3SA3+…) where Pa is proportion of age a fish in Nt • So the population SAt is a weighted average of the age-specific rates SAa, with each age rate weighted by Pa

  8. Age-structured models warn us to expect big drops in mean fecundity and production during both periods of heavy fishing and periods of population recovery A simulated population decline and recovery, based on yellowfin tuna parameters Associated changes in surplus production and production/biomass Biomass next year = Biomass this year + Production – Catch which implies: Production=Biomass next year-Biomass this year +Catch

  9. An example: Bill Pine’s SRA reconstruction of shad population change in Hudson and other rivers There is a long History of catch Statistics (removal Rates) But only a short, history of noisy data on trends in stock size

  10. We can back-calculate surplus production from catch and biomass change

More Related