Goodbye K Welcome M The Interrelationship between Life
Goodbye K, Welcome M The Interrelationship between Life Span, Growth and Reproduction Rainer Froese IFM-GEOMAR Kiel, Germany
The Interrelationship between Lifespan, Growth and Reproduction • Relationship between lifespan and reproduction: – In stable populations, on average, every adult produces ONE new adult during its lifetime • Relationship between growth and reproduction: – In species with indeterminate growth, fecundity increases proportional to body weight (GSI is constant) • Relationship between lifespan and growth: – Currently none – Size at age is a function of maximum size and a parameter (K) indicating how fast it is reached
Approaching the Problem • • Growth is constrained by oxygen Lifespan is determined by mortality rate Maximum size is determined by lifespan K = 2/3 M The most important point in life Growth and maturity Framework for lifespan, growth & reproduction Implications for managment
Growth is Constrained by Oxygen • Growth needs food and energy for assimilation • The oxygen-temperature window restricts growth (Pörtner, Science 2004) • Water-breathing is energy-demanding • Physics determine gill-area
Gill Area vs Body Weight log GA = 0. 65 + 0. 91 log BW r 2 = 0. 93 Goby 0. 02 g 0. 2 cm 2 Data for 118 species of fishes, from Fish. Base 11/2006 Megamouth 0. 8 tons 57 m 2
Lifespan is Determined by Mortality Rate • M is constant during adult life – Intrinsic mortality rate increases (wear & tear, mutations acting late in life) – Extrinsic mortality decreases (with size and growing experience in predator avoidance)
Size of prey vs predator 4, 453 cases for 1, 743 species of fishes, data from Fish. Base 11/2006
Lifespan is Determined by Mortality Rate • M is constant during adult life – Intrinsic mortality rate increases (wear & tear, mutations acting late in life) – Extrinsic mortality decreases (with size and growing experience in predator avoidance) – Intrinsic and extrinsic mortality balance each other, resulting in constant adult mortality – Confirmed by 168 studies fitting a linear regression to (log) numbers at age (data in Fish. Base 11/2006) • If adult mortality is constant, then mean adult life expectancy E = 1/M (from continuous life table analysis)
Approaching the Problem • Growth is constrained by oxygen • Lifespan is determined by mortality rate • Maximum size is determined by lifespan
Maximum Size is Determined by Lifespan largest water-breathers fastest growth warm water longest lifespan cold water smallest vertebrates Based on growth data for 6, 418 populations of fishes in Fish. Base 11/2006
Maximum Size is Determined by Lifespan Empirical within species: Linf = C tmax 0. 41
Slope of Linf-tmax trade-off The slope is not significantly different in • Taxonomic groups (Class, Order, Families) • Salinity (marine, freshwater, diadromous) • Deep waters • Climate zones (temperate, subtropical, tropical)
Approaching the Problem • • Growth is constrained by oxygen Lifespan is determined by mortality rate Maximum size is determined by lifespan K = 2/3 M
The von Bertalanffy Growth Equation
Growth and Mortality
Growth and Mortality Winf
Growth and Mortality
Growth and Mortality M/K > 3/2 Peak left and smaller M/K < 3/2 Peak right and smaller M/K = 3/2
Growth and Mortality • Empirical slope of Linf-tmax trade-off is 0. 41 (95% CL 0. 35 – 0. 48) • Theoretical slope of Linf-tmax trade-off that results in overlap of maximum growth rate with maximum expected body weight is 0. 45 (i. e. , not significantly different from empirical value)
Growth, Mortality and Fecundity Expected fecundity M/K = 3/2 maximizes fitness
Empirical Evidence for M/K = 3/2 Based on growth and mortality data for 272 populations of 181 species, Fish. Base 11/2006
The New Growth Equations
More Evidence
Approaching the Problem • • • Growth is constrained by oxygen Lifespan is determined by mortality rate Maximum size is determined by lifespan K = 2/3 M The most important point in life
The Most Important Point in Life • Where growth is maximum • Where expected fecundity is maximum
Growth and Maturity low fecundity, low dependence on environment high fecundity, high dependence on environment Maturity data for 672 populations of 351 species from Fish. Base 11/2006
Framework for Lifespan, Growth and Reproduction
Framework for Lifespan, Growth and Reproduction
Framework for Lifespan, Growth and Reproduction
Approaching the Problem • • Growth is constrained by oxygen Lifespan is determined by mortality rate Maximum size is determined by lifespan K = 2/3 M The most important point in life Growth and maturity Framework for lifespan, growth & reproduction Implications for managment
Implications for Management
Implications for Management
Implications for Management
Conclusions • Growth is determined by mean adult life expectancy, which is the inverse of the mortality rate • At Lopt = 2/3 Linf, growth rate and expected fecundity are maximum • Maturity is reached between topt -1 and topt, depending on life history strategy • Ignoring the relationships between growth, mortality and reproduction may contribute to widespread failure of fisheries management
Thank You
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