Frisk M G, Miller T J, Martell S J D, Sosebee K
Marine Sciences Research Center, Stony Brook University, Stony Brook, New York 11794, USA.
Ecol Appl. 2008 Jan;18(1):234-45. doi: 10.1890/06-1392.1.
Regime shifts are a feature of many ecosystems. During the last 40 years, intensive commercial exploitation and environmental changes have driven substantial shifts in ecosystem structure and function in the northwest Atlantic. In the Georges Bank-southern New England region, commercially important species have declined, and the ecosystem shifted to one dominated by economically undesirable species such as skates and dogfish. Aggregated abundance indices indicate a large increase of small and medium-sized elasmobranchs in the early 1980s following the decline of many commercial species. It has been hypothesized that ecological interactions such as competition and predation within the Georges Bank region were responsible for and are maintaining the "elasmobranch outburst" at the heart of the observed ecosystem shift. We offer an alternative hypothesis invoking population connectivity among winter skate populations such that the observed abundance increase is a result of migratory dynamics, perhaps with the Scotian Shelf (i.e., it is an open population). Here we critically evaluate the survey data for winter skate, the species principally responsible for the increase in total skate abundance during the 1980s on Georges Bank, to assess support for both hypotheses. We show that time series from different surveys within the Georges Bank region exhibit low coherence, indicating that a widespread population increase was not consistently shown by all surveys. Further, we argue that observed length-frequency data for Georges Bank indicate biologically unrealistic population fluctuations if the population is closed. Neither finding supports the elasmobranch outburst hypothesis. In contrast, survey time series for Georges Bank and the Scotian Shelf are negatively correlated, in support of the population connectivity hypothesis. Further, we argue that understanding the mechanisms of ecosystem state changes and population connectivity are needed to make inferences about both the causes and appropriate management responses to large-scale system change.
regime shifts是许多生态系统的一个特征。在过去40年里,密集的商业开发和环境变化推动了西北大西洋生态系统结构和功能的重大转变。在乔治斯浅滩 - 新英格兰南部地区,具有商业重要性的物种数量减少,生态系统转变为以鳐鱼和角鲨等经济上不受欢迎的物种为主导。综合丰度指数表明,在许多商业物种数量下降后的20世纪80年代初,中小型板鳃亚纲鱼类数量大幅增加。据推测,乔治斯浅滩地区内的竞争和捕食等生态相互作用是导致并维持观察到的生态系统转变核心的“板鳃亚纲鱼类爆发”的原因。我们提出了另一种假设,即冬季鳐鱼种群之间存在种群连通性,因此观察到的数量增加是迁徙动态的结果,也许与斯科舍陆架有关(即它是一个开放种群)。在这里,我们严格评估冬季鳐鱼的调查数据,该物种是20世纪80年代乔治斯浅滩鳐鱼总数量增加的主要原因,以评估对这两种假设的支持程度。我们表明,乔治斯浅滩地区不同调查的时间序列显示出低相关性,这表明并非所有调查都一致显示出广泛的种群增加。此外,我们认为,如果种群是封闭的,乔治斯浅滩观察到的体长 - 频率数据表明种群波动在生物学上是不现实的。这两个发现都不支持板鳃亚纲鱼类爆发假说。相比之下,乔治斯浅滩和斯科舍陆架的调查时间序列呈负相关,支持种群连通性假说。此外,我们认为需要了解生态系统状态变化和种群连通性的机制,以便推断大规模系统变化的原因和适当的管理应对措施。