Review of major ecosystem model classes - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 44
About This Presentation
Title:

Review of major ecosystem model classes

Description:

ATLANTIS used to evaluate the performance of ecological indicators. ATLANTIS used to test ecosystem models such as EwE by generating simulated data ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:120
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 45
Provided by: stNmf
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Review of major ecosystem model classes


1
Review of major ecosystem model classes
National Ecosystem Modeling Workshop
(NEMoW) August 29-31 2007, NMFS Santa Cruz
  • Éva Plagányi
  • Dept. of Maths Applied Maths, University of
    Cape Town

With thanks to Doug Butterworth and MARAM
Reference Plagányi 2007. Models for an Ecosystem
Approach to Fisheries. FAO Fisheries Technical
paper 477 Report of Modelling Ecosystem
Interactions for Informing an Ecosystem Approach
to Fisheries Best Practices in Ecosystem
Modeling, Tivoli, July 3-6, 2007
2
OUTLINE OF TALK
  • Ecosystem Model Objectives
  • Ecosystem Model Types
  • Questions for EAF Modelling
  • Ecosystem Model Classification
  • Considerations in Model Building and the Best
    Practice Approach
  • Role of Management Procedures
  • Data requirements
  • Conclusions

3
Ecosystem Models and Management Advice
  • Conceptual/understanding of the structure,
    functioning and interactions of the ecosystem, or
    sub-system, under consideration. May not be used
    explicitly in decision-making or scientific
    advice but forms the underlying context for any
    detailed management planning and decision-making
  • Strategic decisions linked to policy goals and
    are generally long-range, broadly-based and
    inherently adaptable
  • Tactical decisions aimed at the short-term (e.g.
    next 3-5 years), linked to an operational
    objective and in the form of a rigid set of
    instructions e.g. tactical decision to change
    quota

Ecosystem models generally intended to complement
not replace single-species assessment models
4
OUTLINE OF TALK
  • Ecosystem Model Objectives
  • Ecosystem Model Types
  • Questions for EAF Modelling
  • Ecosystem Model Classification
  • Considerations in Model Building and the Best
    Practice Approach
  • Role of Management Procedures
  • Data requirements
  • Conclusions

5
Model types
  • Whole ecosystem models models that attempt to
    take into account all trophic levels in the
    ecosystem
  • Minimum Realistic Models (MRM) limited number of
    species most likely to have important
    interactions with a target species of interest
  • Dynamic System Models (Biophysical) represent
    both bottom-up (physical) and top-down
    (biological) forces interacting in an ecosystem
  • Extensions of single-species assessment models
    (ESAM) expand on current single-species
    assessment models taking only a few additional
    inter-specific interactions into account

6
Ecosystem ModelsI. Whole ecosystem models
7
Ecosystem Models- plankton focus (NPZ-fish)
8
Ecosystem ModelsII. Minimum Realistic Models
9
Ecosystem ModelsII. Minimum Realistic Models
10
Ecosystem ModelsII. Minimum Realistic Models
cont.
11
Ecosystem Models- Antarctic Models
12
Ecosystem ModelsIII. Dynamic System Models
13
Ecosystem ModelsIV. Extended Single-Species
Models
14
OUTLINE OF TALK
  • Ecosystem Model Objectives
  • Ecosystem Model Types
  • Questions for EAF Modelling
  • Ecosystem Model Classification
  • Considerations in Model Building and the Best
    Practice Approach
  • Role of Management Procedures
  • Data requirements
  • Conclusions

15
Questions for EAF Modelling
  • Issues pertaining to the management of target and
    related species
  • Impact of a target species on other species in
    the ecosystem?
  • Limitations of single-species-based assessment
  • Targeting of relatively unexploited species
  • What are the impacts of retained by-catch?
  • What is the effect on top predators of removing
    the predators themselves and their prey?
  • What is the extent of competition between
    fisheries and species of concern such as marine
    mammals, turtles, seabirds and sharks.

16
Questions for EAF Modelling
  • Issues pertaining to species
  • What are the impacts of fishing on biodiversity?
  • What are the impacts of commencing fishing on a
    previously unexploited species about which little
    is known.
  • Effects of the introduction of non-native
    species.
  • What are the impacts of non-retained by-catch?

17
Questions for EAF Modelling
  • Environmental and unintentional impacts on
    ecosystems
  • Effects of physical/environmental factors on the
    resources on which fisheries depend.
  • Changes in ecosystem state, e.g. regime shift,
    change to a less productive/less desirable state.
  • Anthropogenic effects.
  • Effects of habitat modification e.g. trawling
    damaging benthic habitats

18
(No Transcript)
19
(No Transcript)
20
OUTLINE OF TALK
  • Ecosystem Model Objectives
  • Ecosystem Model Types
  • Questions for EAF Modelling
  • Ecosystem Model Classification
  • Considerations in Model Building and the Best
    Practice Approach
  • Role of Management Procedures
  • Data requirements
  • Conclusions

21
Biological interactions described
Technical interaction models MSYPR Murawski 1984
No
Yes
No
Predators added to single-species models e.g.
SEASTAR Gulland 1983 Livingston and Methot 1998
Hollowed et al. 2000 Plagányi 2004 Tjelmeland
and Lindstrøm 2005
Predator prey feedback
Yes
Handles the environment and lower trophic levels
No
Yes
Handles age/size structure
Yes
No
Handles age structure
Yes
No
Handles spatial structure
Handles spatial structure
Yes
Multispecies Production Models e.g. Horbowy 2005
No
No
Yes
Spatial dynamic systems models e.g. ATLANTIS,
ERSEM, SEAPODYM
Aggregate system models e.g. EwE, SKEBUB, SSEM
Dynamic multi-species models BORMICON, GADGET,
MRMs, MSVPA MSFOR, MSM, MULTSPEC, OSMOSE
Dynamic systems models e.g. some recent EwE
applications
Spatial aggregate systems models e.g. ECOSPACE
Pg. 4
22
(No Transcript)
23
Marine mammals, sharks etc
TROPHIC LEVEL
Clupeoids, demersals etc
Zooplankton, filter-feeders
Phytoplankton, detritus
24
OUTLINE OF TALK
  • Ecosystem Model Objectives
  • Ecosystem Model Types
  • Questions for EAF Modelling
  • Ecosystem Model Classification
  • Considerations in Model Building and the Best
    Practice Approach
  • Role of Management Procedures
  • Data requirements
  • Conclusions

25
Strategical Model Considerations and the Best
Practice Approach(based on report from the July
2007 FAO Workshop)
26
EwE Foraging arena
27
(No Transcript)
28
(No Transcript)
29
(No Transcript)
30
EXAMPLES OSMOSE Spatially explicit with fish
schools moving to areas with highest potential
prey biomass GADGET migration matrices
specifying movement between areas can
parameterise by fitting to data SEAPODYM
Movement model linked to habitat quality
31
(No Transcript)
32
(No Transcript)
33
(No Transcript)
34
e.g. EwE, GADGET, SEPODYM
e.g. GADGET, new EwE
35
Recent trends in model development
  • Modularisation e.g. substitute different
    growth, functional response modules
  • Fitting to time series data
  • Computing constraints e.g. running on multiple
    computers in parallel using PVM
  • Spatial considerations
  • Representation of socio-economic factors and
    human behavioural drivers
  • Multiple sector dynamics and management
  • Representation of biodiversity
  • Multi-species/ecosystem MSEs

36
OUTLINE OF TALK
  • Ecosystem Model Objectives
  • Ecosystem Model Types
  • Questions for EAF Modelling
  • Ecosystem Model Classification
  • Considerations in Model Building and the Best
    Practice Approach
  • Role of Management Procedures
  • Data requirements
  • Conclusions

37
Role of OMP/MP/MSEs(MP Management procedure
MSE Management Strategy Evaluation)
Operating Model to simulate true dynamics of
resource
OPERATING MODEL
MANAGEMENT PROCEDURE
From Rademeyer et al. 2007
38
Role of OMP/MP/MSEs(MP Management procedure
MSE Management Strategy Evaluation)
  • Approach involves an evaluation of the
    implications of alternative combinations of
    monitoring data, analytical procedures, and
    decision rules to provide advice on management
    measures that are robust to inherent
    uncertainties in all inputs and assumptions used.
  • MSE or MP frameworks are used to identify and
    model uncertainties and to balance different
    resource dynamics representations.
  • They provide key examples of formal methods for
    addressing uncertainty issues.

39
More re Dealing with Uncertainty
  • Few ecosystem models with applications to
    practical fisheries management
  • Management Procedure testing procedures can use
    changes in single species parameters (such as
    carrying capacity K) as a surrogate for
    ecological ecosystem effects e.g. climate change
    that are difficult to incorporate explicitly in
    operating models
  • Technical ecosystem effects such as bycatch
    concerns can also be included as Robustness tests
    in the MP testing process
  • These additions constitute a first step towards
    incorporating ecosystem aspects into practical
    fisheries management advice
  • Multi-species/Ecosystem MPs being developed

Pg. 52
40
Multi-species/Ecosystem MPs
  • ATLANTIS used to evaluate the performance of
    ecological indicators
  • ATLANTIS used to test ecosystem models such as
    EwE by generating simulated data with known
    parameters
  • South African Pelagic OMP - food requirements of
    predators such as penguins need to be accounted
    for in the management process
  • CCAMLR FOOSA and SMOM spatially explicit
    multi-species MP frameworks

41
Spatial Multi-species Operating Model (SMOM) of
Krill-Predator Interactions
No feedback
Feedback
SMOM-predicted change in predator abundance with
a) no feedback in spatial catch allocations and
b) using a feedback control rule based on a
moderate amount monitoring information available
for all SSMUs.
42
OUTLINE OF TALK
  • Ecosystem Model Objectives
  • Ecosystem Model Types
  • Questions for EAF Modelling
  • Ecosystem Model Classification
  • Considerations in Model Building and the Best
    Practice Approach
  • Role of Management Procedures
  • Data requirements
  • Conclusions

43
Data Requirements
DETAILED DATA RE FEW SPECIES USUALLY SIZE/AGE
STRUCTURE DATA
MRM
MORE DATA RE MORE SPECIES e.g. ADDING AGE
STRUCTURE
ENVIRONMENT, ECONOMIC, SOCIAL, FISHING FLEET,
ANTHROPOGENIC
44
Some conclusions
  • A good range of models have been developed for
    the task of EAF, but greater focus is needed on
    strengthening these approaches and conducting the
    necessary data collection and experimentation to
    underpin confidence in these approaches
  • Management decisions will be enhanced by
    exploring the same issue with different models
    confidence in the decisions will increase when
    the models independently converge on the same
    management decisions and when uncertainties in
    the results have been adequately considered.
  • MSE/MP approach is best practice
  • Strategical modelling will mainly be used to
    inform and evaluate the Ecosystem Approach to
    Fisheries, with use in tactical decisions rare
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com