Multiple growth-correlated life history traits estimated simultaneously in indivuals

F.M. Mollet, B. Ernande, T.P.A. Brunel, A.D. Rijnsdorp

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

18 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

We present a new methodology to estimate rates of energy acquisition, maintenance, reproductive investment and the onset of maturation (four-trait estimation) by fitting an energy allocation model to individual growth trajectories. The accuracy and precision of the method is evaluated on simulated growth trajectories. In the deterministic case, all life history parameters are well estimated with negligible bias over realistic parameter ranges. Adding environmental variability reduces precision, causes the maintenance and reproductive investment to be confounded with a negative error correlation, and tends, if strong, to result in an underestimation of the energy acquisition and maintenance and an overestimation of the age and size at the onset of maturation. Assuming a priori incorrect allometric scaling exponents also leads to a general but fairly predictable bias. To avoid confounding in applications we propose to assume a constant maintenance (three-trait estimation), which can be obtained by fitting reproductive investment simultaneously to size at age on population data. The results become qualitatively more robust but the improvement of the estimate of the onset of maturation is not significant. When applied to growth curves back-calculated from otoliths of female North Sea plaice Pleuronectes platessa, the four-trait and three-trait estimation produced estimates for the onset of maturation very similar to those obtained by direct observation. The correlations between life-history traits match expectations. We discuss the potential of the methodology in studies of the ecology and evolution of life history parameters in wild populations
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)10-26
JournalOikos
Volume119
Issue number1
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2010

Keywords

  • north-sea plaice
  • pleuronectes-platessa l
  • herring clupea-harengus
  • evolving fish stocks
  • indeterminate growth
  • back-calculation
  • somatic growth
  • reaction norms
  • resource-allocation
  • arctica-islandica

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Multiple growth-correlated life history traits estimated simultaneously in indivuals'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this