Eco-evolutionary responses to recreational fishing under different harvest regulations
Authored by Daniel Ayllon, Steven F Railsback, Ana Almodovar, Graciela G Nicola, Simone Vincenzi, Benigno Elvira, Volker Grimm
Date Published: 2018
DOI: 10.1002/ece3.4270
Sponsors:
European Union
Platforms:
NetLogo
Model Documentation:
ODD
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
https://github.com/DanielAyllon/inSTREAM-Gen-Fishing-version
Abstract
Harvesting alters demography and life histories of exploited
populations, and there is mounting evidence that rapid phenotypic
changes at the individual level can occur when harvest is intensive.
Therefore, recreational fishing is expected to induce both ecological
and rapid evolutionary changes in fish populations and consequently
requires rigorous management. However, little is known about the coupled
demographic and evolutionary consequences of alternative harvest
regulations in managed freshwater fisheries. We used a structurally
realistic individual-based model and implemented an eco-genetic approach
that accounts for microevolution, phenotypic plasticity, adaptive
behavior, density-dependent processes, and cryptic mortality sources
(illegal harvest and hooking mortality after catch and release). We
explored the consequences of a range of harvest regulations, involving
different combinations of exploitation intensity and minimum and
maximum-length limits, on the eco-evolutionary trajectories of a
freshwater fish stock. Our 100-year simulations of size-selective
harvest through recreational fishing produced negative demographic and
structural changes in the simulated population, but also plastic and
evolutionary responses that compensated for such changes and prevented
population collapse even under intense fishing pressure and liberal
harvest regulations. Fishing-induced demographic and evolutionary
changes were driven by the harvest regime, and the strength of responses
increased with increasing exploitation intensity and decreasing
restriction in length limits. Cryptic mortality strongly amplified the
impacts of harvest and might be exerting a selective pressure that
opposes that of size-selective harvest. Slot limits on harvestable
length had overall positive effects but lower than expected ability to
buffer harvest impacts. Harvest regulations strongly shape the
eco-evolutionary dynamics of exploited fish stocks and thus should be
considered in setting management policies. Our findings suggest that
plastic and evolutionary responses buffer the demographic impacts of
fishing, but intense fishing pressure and liberal harvest regulations
may lead to an unstructured, juvenescent population that would put the
sustainability of the stock at risk. Our study also indicates that high
rates of cryptic mortality may make harvest regulations based on harvest
slot limits ineffective.
Tags
Individual-based model
individual-based models
selection
Mortality
Atlantic salmon
Populations
Environmental-change
Brown trout
Eco-evolutionary dynamics
Fisheries-induced evolution
Pike esox-lucius
Genetic model
Eco-genetic modeling
Fishery-induced evolution
Harvest regulations
Recreational fisheries management
Life-history
evolution