Age dependent fecundity and the dynamics of a density-dependent population model (Q1804927)

From MaRDI portal
scientific article
Language Label Description Also known as
English
Age dependent fecundity and the dynamics of a density-dependent population model
scientific article

    Statements

    Age dependent fecundity and the dynamics of a density-dependent population model (English)
    0 references
    0 references
    26 June 1995
    0 references
    The Ricker Stock-Recruitment (SR) relationship is one of the most common mathematical models used in fishery science. Without age-structure, this model is a first-order difference equation that shares with other and similar nonlinear models complicated behaviors, including chaotic ones. As many animal populations have demographic characteristics that differ with age, the importance of considering age-structure within population dynamics models may be critical. Introducing age-structure in the Ricker model considerably complicates the behavior of the population dynamics due to a great sensitivity to life-history parameters. The goal of this study is to explore some of those behaviors. A discrete self-regenerating and age-structured model, based on the Ricker SR relationship, is applied to small pelagic fish species. As any synthetic reproductive function is not defined, the classical Leslie matrix notation is not used. Consequently, the exploration of the dynamic behaviors of the model is performed by numerical simulations with associated graphical tools (attractors and bifurcation diagrams). The main result of this study deals with the distribution among age classes of the ``reproductive potential per recruit.'' This notion includes three basic life-history parameters: the natural mortality rate, the vector of mean weight and the vector of relative degree of fecundity.
    0 references
    Ricker stock-recruitment relationship
    0 references
    reproductive potential per recruit
    0 references
    age-structure
    0 references
    natural mortality rate
    0 references
    relative degree of fecundity
    0 references

    Identifiers