Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom, The Laboratory, Citadel Hill, Plymouth, UK.
Adv Mar Biol. 2013;65:1-65. doi: 10.1016/B978-0-12-410498-3.00001-X.
Global landings of cephalopods (cuttlefish, squid and octopus) have increased dramatically over the past 50 years and now constitute almost 5% of the total world's fisheries production. At a time when landings of many traditional fin-fish stocks are continuing to experience a global decline as a result of over-exploitation, it is expected that fishing pressure on cephalopod stocks will continue to rise as the fishing industry switch their focus onto these non-quota species. However, long-term trends indicate that landings may have begun to plateau or even decrease. In European waters, cuttlefish are among the most important commercial cephalopod resource and are currently the highest yielding cephalopod group harvested in the north-east Atlantic, with the English Channel supporting the main fishery for this species. Recruitment variability in this short-lived species drives large fluctuations in landings. In order to provide sustainable management for Sepia officinalis populations, it is essential that we first have a thorough understanding of the ecology and life history of this species, in particular, the factors affecting spawning, early life stage (ELS) survival and recruitment variability. This review explores how and why such variability exists, starting with the impact of maternal effects (e.g. navigation, migration and egg laying), moving onto the direct impact of environmental variation on embryonic and ELSs and culminating on the impacts that these variations (maternal and environmental) have at a population level on annual recruitment success. Understanding these factors is critical to the effective management of expanding fisheries for this species.
全球头足类(乌贼、鱿鱼和章鱼)的捕捞量在过去 50 年中急剧增加,现在已占全球渔业总产量的近 5%。在许多传统鱼类种群由于过度捕捞而继续持续减少的情况下,预计随着捕鱼业将其重点转移到这些非配额物种上,对头足类种群的捕捞压力将继续上升。然而,长期趋势表明,捕捞量可能已经开始趋于平稳,甚至下降。在欧洲水域,乌贼是最重要的商业头足类资源之一,目前是东北大西洋收获产量最高的头足类群体,英吉利海峡支持该物种的主要渔业。这种寿命短的物种的繁殖可变性导致捕捞量的大幅波动。为了对头足类种群进行可持续管理,我们首先必须深入了解这种物种的生态学和生活史,特别是影响产卵、早期生命阶段(ELS)生存和繁殖可变性的因素。本综述探讨了这种可变性存在的原因和方式,从母性影响(例如导航、迁徙和产卵)的影响开始,接着是环境变化对胚胎和 ELS 的直接影响,最后是这些变化(母性和环境)对种群水平上年度补充成功的影响。了解这些因素对于有效管理这种物种的扩张渔业至关重要。