Contribution of a bioenergetics model to investigate the growth and survival of European seabass in the Bay of Biscay - English Channel area

The European seabass (Dicentrarchus labrax) is a species of particular ecological and economic importance. Stock assessments have recently revealed the worrying state of the "Northern stock", probably due to overfishing and a series of poor recruitments. The extent to which these poor recr...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Dambrine, C., Huret, M., Woillez, M., Pecquerie, Laure, Allal, F., Servili, A., de Pontual, H.
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.documentation.ird.fr/hor/fdi:010078961
id ftird:oai:ird.fr:fdi:010078961
record_format openpolar
spelling ftird:oai:ird.fr:fdi:010078961 2023-05-15T17:41:25+02:00 Contribution of a bioenergetics model to investigate the growth and survival of European seabass in the Bay of Biscay - English Channel area Dambrine, C. Huret, M. Woillez, M. Pecquerie, Laure Allal, F. Servili, A. de Pontual, H. ATLANTIQUE 2020 text/pdf http://www.documentation.ird.fr/hor/fdi:010078961 EN eng http://www.documentation.ird.fr/hor/fdi:010078961 oai:ird.fr:fdi:010078961 Dambrine C., Huret M., Woillez M., Pecquerie Laure, Allal F., Servili A., de Pontual H. Contribution of a bioenergetics model to investigate the growth and survival of European seabass in the Bay of Biscay - English Channel area. Ecological Modelling, 2020, 423, art. 109007 [11p.] Dicentrarchus labrax Northeast Atlantic Dynamic Energy Budget theory Growth Starvation Early-life stages text 2020 ftird 2020-08-25T22:51:44Z The European seabass (Dicentrarchus labrax) is a species of particular ecological and economic importance. Stock assessments have recently revealed the worrying state of the "Northern stock", probably due to overfishing and a series of poor recruitments. The extent to which these poor recruitments are due to environmental variability is difficult to assess, as the processes driving the seabass life cycle are poorly known. Here we investigate how food availability and temperature may affect the growth and survival of wild seabass at the individual scale. To this end, we developed a bioenergetics model based on the Dynamic Energy Budget (DEB) theory. We applied it to seabass population of the Northeast Atlantic region (Bay of Biscay - English Channel area) throughout their entire life cycle. We calibrated the model using a combination of age-related length and weight datasets: two were from aquaculture experiments (larvae and juveniles raised at 15 and 20 degrees C) and one from a wild population (juveniles and adults collected during surveys or fish market sampling). By calibrating the scaled functional response that rules the ingestion of food and using average temperature conditions experienced by wild seabass (obtained from tagged individuals), the model was able to reproduce the duration of the different stages, the growth of the individuals, the number of batches and their survival to starvation. We also captured one of the major differences encountered in the life traits of the species: farmed fish mature earlier than wild fish (3 to 4 years old vs. 6 years old on average for females, respectively) probably due to better feeding conditions and higher temperature. We explored the growth and survival of larvae and juveniles by exposing the individuals to varying temperatures and food levels (including total starvation). We show that early life stages of seabass have a strong capacity to deal with food deprivation: the model estimated that first feeding larvae could survive 17 days at 15 degrees C. We also tested individual variability by adjusting the specific maximum assimilation rate and found that larvae and juveniles with higher assimilation capacity better survived low food levels at a higher temperature. We discuss our results in the context of the recent years of poor recruitment faced by European seabass. Text Northeast Atlantic IRD (Institute de recherche pour le développement): Horizon
institution Open Polar
collection IRD (Institute de recherche pour le développement): Horizon
op_collection_id ftird
language English
topic Dicentrarchus labrax
Northeast Atlantic
Dynamic Energy Budget theory
Growth
Starvation
Early-life stages
spellingShingle Dicentrarchus labrax
Northeast Atlantic
Dynamic Energy Budget theory
Growth
Starvation
Early-life stages
Dambrine, C.
Huret, M.
Woillez, M.
Pecquerie, Laure
Allal, F.
Servili, A.
de Pontual, H.
Contribution of a bioenergetics model to investigate the growth and survival of European seabass in the Bay of Biscay - English Channel area
topic_facet Dicentrarchus labrax
Northeast Atlantic
Dynamic Energy Budget theory
Growth
Starvation
Early-life stages
description The European seabass (Dicentrarchus labrax) is a species of particular ecological and economic importance. Stock assessments have recently revealed the worrying state of the "Northern stock", probably due to overfishing and a series of poor recruitments. The extent to which these poor recruitments are due to environmental variability is difficult to assess, as the processes driving the seabass life cycle are poorly known. Here we investigate how food availability and temperature may affect the growth and survival of wild seabass at the individual scale. To this end, we developed a bioenergetics model based on the Dynamic Energy Budget (DEB) theory. We applied it to seabass population of the Northeast Atlantic region (Bay of Biscay - English Channel area) throughout their entire life cycle. We calibrated the model using a combination of age-related length and weight datasets: two were from aquaculture experiments (larvae and juveniles raised at 15 and 20 degrees C) and one from a wild population (juveniles and adults collected during surveys or fish market sampling). By calibrating the scaled functional response that rules the ingestion of food and using average temperature conditions experienced by wild seabass (obtained from tagged individuals), the model was able to reproduce the duration of the different stages, the growth of the individuals, the number of batches and their survival to starvation. We also captured one of the major differences encountered in the life traits of the species: farmed fish mature earlier than wild fish (3 to 4 years old vs. 6 years old on average for females, respectively) probably due to better feeding conditions and higher temperature. We explored the growth and survival of larvae and juveniles by exposing the individuals to varying temperatures and food levels (including total starvation). We show that early life stages of seabass have a strong capacity to deal with food deprivation: the model estimated that first feeding larvae could survive 17 days at 15 degrees C. We also tested individual variability by adjusting the specific maximum assimilation rate and found that larvae and juveniles with higher assimilation capacity better survived low food levels at a higher temperature. We discuss our results in the context of the recent years of poor recruitment faced by European seabass.
format Text
author Dambrine, C.
Huret, M.
Woillez, M.
Pecquerie, Laure
Allal, F.
Servili, A.
de Pontual, H.
author_facet Dambrine, C.
Huret, M.
Woillez, M.
Pecquerie, Laure
Allal, F.
Servili, A.
de Pontual, H.
author_sort Dambrine, C.
title Contribution of a bioenergetics model to investigate the growth and survival of European seabass in the Bay of Biscay - English Channel area
title_short Contribution of a bioenergetics model to investigate the growth and survival of European seabass in the Bay of Biscay - English Channel area
title_full Contribution of a bioenergetics model to investigate the growth and survival of European seabass in the Bay of Biscay - English Channel area
title_fullStr Contribution of a bioenergetics model to investigate the growth and survival of European seabass in the Bay of Biscay - English Channel area
title_full_unstemmed Contribution of a bioenergetics model to investigate the growth and survival of European seabass in the Bay of Biscay - English Channel area
title_sort contribution of a bioenergetics model to investigate the growth and survival of european seabass in the bay of biscay - english channel area
publishDate 2020
url http://www.documentation.ird.fr/hor/fdi:010078961
op_coverage ATLANTIQUE
genre Northeast Atlantic
genre_facet Northeast Atlantic
op_relation http://www.documentation.ird.fr/hor/fdi:010078961
oai:ird.fr:fdi:010078961
Dambrine C., Huret M., Woillez M., Pecquerie Laure, Allal F., Servili A., de Pontual H. Contribution of a bioenergetics model to investigate the growth and survival of European seabass in the Bay of Biscay - English Channel area. Ecological Modelling, 2020, 423, art. 109007 [11p.]
_version_ 1766142968478040064