International Council for the Exploration of the Sea
Browse
O0506.pdf (1.18 MB)

Relationships between population spatial occupation andpopulation dynamics

Download (1.18 MB)
conference contribution
posted on 2024-02-26, 10:41 authored by Mathieu Woillez, P. Petitgas, J. Rivoirard, P. Fernandes, R. ter Hofstede, K. Korsbrekke, A. Orlowski, M. T. Spedicato, C.-Y. Politou

No abstracts are to be cited without prior reference to the author.

Population dynamics is commonly described non-spatially using parameters of population demography and vital traits. Population spatial organisation is therefore considered implicit and its importance in the population dynamics ignored. The present study evidences on a variety of stocks correlation between population spatial distribution indices, population abundance, recruitment and mortality. Series of research fisheries monitoring surveys were considered for a range of different stocks (cod, herring, anchovy, hake, mullet) in different regions of the North East Atlantic and Mediterranean (North Sea, Barents Sea, Baltic Sea, Bay of Biscay, Tyrrhenian Sea, Ionian Sea and Aegean Sea). For each population, each age and each year, 9 spatial indices were computed that characterised the spatial distribution in their centre of gravity, inertia, anisotropy, extension areas, number of patches and microscale structure. For each population and age, spatial indices were linearly regressed on the abundance, on the following recruitment, and on the mortality residuals (as a constant mortality has been fitted on cohort curves). A meta-analysis table was constructed that showed the number of times that correlations were significant. The result is that spatial indices provide additional indicators for assessing population status and could be helpful in the context of stock decline and habitat loss.

History

Symposia

2006 Annual Science Conference, Maastricht, Netherlands

Session

Theme Session O: Spatio-temporal characteristics of fish populations in relation to environmental forcing functions as a component of ecosystem-based assessment, effects on catchability

Abstract reference

O:05

Recommended citation

[Authors]. 2006. Relationships between population spatial occupation andpopulation dynamics. 2006 Annual Science Conference, Maastricht, Netherlands. CM 2006/O:05. https://doi.org/10.17895/ices.pub.25259176

Usage metrics

    ASC 2006 - Theme session O

    Exports

    RefWorks
    BibTeX
    Ref. manager
    Endnote
    DataCite
    NLM
    DC