Ecosystem limits to food web fluxes and fisheries yields in the North Sea simulated with an end-to-end food web model

Type Article
Date 2012-09
Language English
Author(s) Heath M1
Affiliation(s) 1 : University of Strathclyde, Marine Population Modelling Group, Department of Mathematics and Statistics, Livingstone Tower, Glasgow G1 1XP, UK
Source Progress in Oceanography (0079-6611) (Elsevier), 2012-09 , Vol. 102 , P. 42-66
DOI 10.1016/j.pocean.2012.03.004
WOS© Times Cited 27
Abstract Equilibrium yields from an exploited fish stock represent the surplus production remaining after accounting for losses due to predation. However, most estimates of maximum sustainable yield, upon which fisheries management targets are partly based, assume that productivity and predation rates are constant in time or at least stationary. This means that there is no recognition of the potential for interaction between different fishing sectors. Here, an end-to-end ecosystem model is developed to explore the possible scale and mechanisms of interactions between pelagic and demersal fishing in the North Sea. The model simulates fluxes of nitrogen between detritus, inorganic nutrient and guilds of taxa spanning phytoplankton to mammals. The structure strikes a balance between graininess in space, taxonomy and demography, and the need to constrain the parameter-count sufficiently to enable automatic parameter optimization. Simulated annealing is used to locate the maximum likelihood parameter set, given the model structure and a suite of observations of annual rates of production and fluxes between guilds. Simulations of the impact of fishery harvesting rates showed that equilibrium yields of pelagic and demersal fish were strongly interrelated due to a variety of top-down and bottom-up food web interactions. The results clearly show that management goals based on simultaneously achieving maximum sustainable biomass yields from all commercial fish stocks is simply unattainable. Trade-offs between, for example, pelagic and demersal fishery sectors and other properties of the ecosystem have to be considered in devising an overall harvesting strategy.
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