Multiple-batch spawning : a risk-spreading strategy disarmed by highly intensive size-selective fishing rate
Hočevar, S., Hutchings, J. A., & Kuparinen, A. (2022). Multiple-batch spawning : a risk-spreading strategy disarmed by highly intensive size-selective fishing rate. Proceedings of the Royal Society B : biological sciences, 289(1981), Article 20221172. https://doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2022.1172
Julkaistu sarjassa
Proceedings of the Royal Society B : biological sciencesPäivämäärä
2022Tekijänoikeudet
© 2022 The Authors.
Can the advantage of risk-managing life-history strategies become a disadvantage under human-induced evolution? Organisms have adapted to the variability and uncertainty of environmental conditions with a vast diversity of life-history strategies. One such evolved strategy is multiple-batch spawning, a spawning strategy common to long-lived fishes that ‘hedge their bets' by distributing the risk to their offspring on a temporal and spatial scale. The fitness benefits of this spawning strategy increase with female body size, the very trait that size-selective fishing targets. By applying an empirically and theoretically motivated eco-evolutionary mechanistic model that was parameterized for Atlantic cod (Gadus morhua), we explored how fishing intensity may alter the life-history traits and fitness of fishes that are multiple-batch spawners. Our main findings are twofold; first, the risk-spreading strategy of multiple-batch spawning is not effective against fisheries selection, because the fisheries selection favours smaller fish with a lower risk-spreading effect; and second, the ecological recovery in population size does not secure evolutionary recovery in the population size structure. The beneficial risk-spreading mechanism of the batch spawning strategy highlights the importance of recovery in the size structure of overfished stocks, from which a full recovery in the population size can follow.
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The Royal SocietyISSN Hae Julkaisufoorumista
0962-8452Asiasanat
Julkaisu tutkimustietojärjestelmässä
https://converis.jyu.fi/converis/portal/detail/Publication/155791664
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Näytä kaikki kuvailutiedotKokoelmat
Rahoittaja(t)
Euroopan komissio; Suomen AkatemiaRahoitusohjelmat(t)
Akatemiahanke, SA
The content of the publication reflects only the author’s view. The funder is not responsible for any use that may be made of the information it contains.
Lisätietoja rahoituksesta
This study was funded by the Academy of Finland (project grant 317495 to A.K.), Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC; Discovery Grants to J.A.H. and A.K.) and the European Research Council (COMPLEX-FISH 770884 to A.K.).Lisenssi
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