Effects of changes in density-dependent growth and recruitment on sustainable harvest of lake whitefish
Authored by Jenilee Gobin, Nigel P Lester, Michael G Fox, Erin S Dunlop
Date Published: 2016
DOI: 10.1016/j.jglr.2016.05.003
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Abstract
Substantial declines in growth and recruitment of lake whitefish
(Coregonus clupeaformis) and changes in key density-dependent
relationships since the 1990s have raised concerns about the effects of
these changes on valuable commercial fisheries in Lake Huron. There is
evidence for lake whitefish in the southern main basin of Lake Huron
that growth and recruitment rates have been reduced by up to 50\%. Using
a life history model parameterized from fishery-independent survey data
for lake whitefish, we investigated the effects of declines in growth
and recruitment rates on population dynamics and sustainable harvest. We
evaluated a baseline scenario characterized by high growth and
recruitment rates, an alternative scenario with a reduced growth rate, and another alternative scenario in which both growth and recruitment
rates were reduced. Yield consistently declined by at least 71\% in both
alternative scenarios compared to the baseline scenario. Also, fishing
became unsustainable when both growth and recruitment rates were reduced
and the maximum instantaneous fishing mortality rate exceeded 0.5. Our
results suggest that the recent reductions in growth and recruitment
observed in Lake Huron are of sufficient magnitude to alter productivity
and reduce how much can be sustainability harvested from these stocks.
(C) 2016 International Association for Great Lakes Research. Published
by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Tags
Life-history
Laurentian great-lakes
Food-web
Fisheries-induced evolution
Northeast arctic
cod
Long-term trends
Coregonus-clupeaformis
Fish
populations
Ecosystem change
Huron