How community ecology links natural mortality, growth, and production of fish populations

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Abstract

Size-spectrum theory is used to show that (i) predation mortality is a decreasing function of individual size and proportional to the consumption rate of predators; (ii) adult natural mortality M is proportional to the von Bertalanffy growth constant K; and (iii) productivity rate P/B is proportional to the asymptotic weight W∞-1/3. The constants of proportionality are specified using individual level parameters related to physiology or prey encounter. The derivations demonstrate how traditional fisheries theory can be connected to community ecology. Implications for the use of models for ecosystem-based fisheries management are discussed. © 2009 International Council for the Exploration of the Sea. Published by Oxford Journals. All rights reserved.

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Andersen, K. H., Farnsworth, K. D., Pedersen, M., Gislason, H., & Beyer, J. E. (2009). How community ecology links natural mortality, growth, and production of fish populations. In ICES Journal of Marine Science (Vol. 66, pp. 1978–1984). https://doi.org/10.1093/icesjms/fsp161

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