Life-history traits displayed by neritic fish in the Benguela Current ecosystem |
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Abstract: | Three fish species, anchovy, hake and lanternfish, occupy different habitats in the neritic zone of the Benguela Current ecosystem. Compatibility between the predicted environmental variability in each habitat and the collection of life history traits found in each species is examined with simulation models. Variability in early-stage survival is introduced into the models by means of both random and non-random ("red") spectra. Traits exhibited by lanternfish are shown to be inefficient in filtering out random variability and the species therefore cannot prevent collapse in a non-randomly variable environment. By comparison, the traits found in anchovy and hake filter out part of both random and non-random variability in survival and allow a fairly stable population size to be maintained. It is argued that, as life-history traits are adapted to the spectrum of variability associated with the habitat, only anomalies with respect to this spectrum are likely to have a large influence on stock size. |
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