
Predicting skipjack tuna forage distributions in the
equatorial Pacific using a coupled dynamical
bio-geochemical model
Lehodey
P., Andre J-M, Bertignac M., Hampton J., Stoens A., Menkes C., Memery L., Grima N. (1998).
Predicting skipjack tuna forage distributions in the equatorial Pacific using a coupled dynamical bio-geochemical model. Fisheries Oceanography (special issue of
GLOBEC Open Science Meeting), Volume 7, number 3 and 4: 317 - 325
|
[Please
send me a copy of the full article]
|
|
Abstract.
Skipjack
tuna (Katsuwonus pelamis) contributes ~70% of the total tuna catch in the Pacific
Ocean. This species occurs in the upper mixed-layer throughout the equatorial region, but
the largest catches are taken from the warmpool in the western equatorial Pacific. The
analysis of catch and effort data for U.S. purse seine fisheries in the western Pacific
has demonstrated that one of the most successful fishing grounds is located in the
vicinity of a convergence zone between the warm (>28-29° C) low-salinity water of the
warmpool and the cold saline water of equatorial upwelling in the central Pacific (Lehodey
et al., 1997). This zone of convergence, identified by a well-marked salinity front
and approximated by the 28.5°C isotherm, oscillates zonally over several thousands of km
in correlation with the El Niño-Southern Oscillation. The present study focuses on the
prediction of skipjack tuna forage that is expected to be a major factor in explaining the
basin scale distribution of the stock. It could also explain the close relation between
displacements of skipjack tuna and the convergence zone on the eastern edge of the
warmpool. A simple bio-geochemical model was coupled with a general circulation model,
allowing reasonable predictions of new primary production in the equatorial Pacific from
mid-1992 to mid-1995. The biological transfer of this production toward tuna forage was
simply parameterized according to the food chain length and redistributed by the currents
using the circulation model. Tuna forage accumulated in the convergence zone of the
horizontal currents, which corresponds to the warmpool/equatorial upwelling boundary.
Predicted forage maxima corresponded well with high catch rates.
|
|