Evolutionary impact assessment of the North Sea plaice fishery
Authored by Ulf Dieckmann, Fabian M Mollet, Jan Jaap Poos, Adriaan D Rijnsdorp
Date Published: 2016
DOI: 10.1139/cjfas-2014-0568
Sponsors:
European Science Foundation
European Union
Austrian Science Fund (FWF)
Dutch Ministry of Economic Affairs
Dutch Ministries
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
There is growing evidence that fishing causes evolution in life-history
traits that affect the productivity of fish stocks. Here we explore the
impact of fisheries-induced evolution (FIE) on the productivity of North
Sea plaice (Pleuronectes platessa) using an ecogenetic, individual-based
model by comparing management scenarios with and without an evolutionary
response. Under status-quo management, plaice evolve towards smaller
size at age, earlier maturation, and higher reproductive investment.
Current reference points of maximum sustainable yield (MSY) and
corresponding fishing-mortality rate (FMSY) that ignore FIE will
decrease and cannot be considered sustainable. The nature and extent of
the change through FIE depend on fishing effort and selectivity. The
adverse evolutionary effects can be reduced - and even reversed - by
implementing a dome-shaped exploitation pattern protecting the large
fish. The evolutionarily sustainable maximum yield can be obtained by
combining such a dome-shaped exploitation pattern with a reduction in
fishing mortality and an increase in mesh size; it is similar to the MSY
that would apply if life-history traits were static. Fisheries managers
will need to trade off the short-term loss in yield associated with
evolutionarily informed management with the long-term loss in yield FIE
causes under evolutionarily uninformed management.
Tags
Mortality
Mechanism
growth
Temperature
Size
Reproduction
General-model
Pleuronectes-platessa l
Cod