Investigating fish phenology and essential habitats through Empirical
Orthogonal Functions
Abstract
Fish spawning phenology is a major concern for conservation and
fisheries management. New intensive data sources such as GPS-based
tracking data or high resolution catch declaration data are
progressively becoming available in the field of marine ecology. These
benefit from high spatio-temporal resolution and open new research
avenues to investigate inter-annual and seasonal variability of
phenology. In this paper, we illustrate how catch declarations modeling
coupled with spatio-temporal dimension reduction methods known as
Empirical Orthogonal Functions (EOF) can be used to synthetize
spatio-temporal signals in fish distribution; Specifically, we address
the following questions; (1) can we identify spatio-seasonal patterns
that can be interpreted in terms of seasonal migration between essential
habitats? (2) can we identify changes in the phenology? (3) are those
changes related to environmental drivers? The analysis is illustrated
through the analysis of the reproduction phenology on three key
commercial species in the Bay of Biscay (Hake, Sole and Sea Bass). The
EOF analysis on these species emphasizes strong seasonal spatio-temporal
patterns that correspond to migration patterns between feeding areas and
reproduction areas. Based on this methodology, we identify seasonal
variations in the timing of the reproduction and we relate these to Sea
Surface Temperature, a key driver of fish reproduction.