Bradley Darcy, Conklin Eric, Papastamatiou Yannis P, McCauley Douglas J, Pollock Kydd, Kendall Bruce E, Gaines Steven D, Caselle Jennifer E
Bren School of Environmental Science and Management, University of California Santa Barbara, Santa Barbara, California, United States of America.
The Nature Conservancy, Honolulu, Hawaii, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2017 Feb 16;12(2):e0172370. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0172370. eCollection 2017.
For broadly distributed, often overexploited species such as elasmobranchs (sharks and rays), conservation management would benefit from understanding how life history traits change in response to local environmental and ecological factors. However, fishing obfuscates this objective by causing complex and often mixed effects on the life histories of target species. Disentangling the many drivers of life history variability requires knowledge of elasmobranch populations in the absence of fishing, which is rarely available. Here, we describe the growth, maximum size, sex ratios, size at maturity, and offer a direct estimate of survival of an unfished population of grey reef sharks (Carcharhinus amblyrhynchos) using data from an eight year tag-recapture study. We then synthesized published information on the life history of C. amblyrhynchos from across its geographic range, and for the first time, we attempted to disentangle the contribution of fishing from geographic variation in an elasmobranch species. For Palmyra's unfished C. amblyrhynchos population, the von Bertalanffy growth function (VBGF) growth coefficient k was 0.05 and asymptotic length L∞ was 163.3 cm total length (TL). Maximum size was 175.5 cm TL from a female shark, length at maturity was estimated at 116.7-123.2 cm TL for male sharks, maximum lifespan estimated from VBGF parameters was 18.1 years for both sexes combined, and annual survival was 0.74 year-1. Consistent with findings from studies on other elasmobranch species, we found significant intraspecific variability in reported life history traits of C. amblyrhynchos. However, contrary to what others have reported, we did not find consistent patterns in life history variability as a function of biogeography or fishing. Ultimately, the substantial, but not yet predictable variability in life history traits observed for C. amblyrhynchos across its geographic range suggests that regional management may be necessary to set sustainable harvest targets and to recover this and other shark species globally.
对于像板鳃亚纲鱼类(鲨鱼和鳐鱼)这样广泛分布且常被过度捕捞的物种,保护管理将受益于了解其生活史特征如何响应当地环境和生态因素而变化。然而,捕捞通过对目标物种的生活史造成复杂且往往是混合的影响,使这一目标变得模糊不清。要理清生活史变异性的众多驱动因素,需要了解在没有捕捞情况下的板鳃亚纲鱼类种群情况,而这种情况很少见。在此,我们利用一项为期八年的标记重捕研究数据,描述了未被捕捞的灰礁鲨(Carcharhinus amblyrhynchos)种群的生长、最大体型、性别比例、成熟时的体型,并直接估计了其存活率。然后,我们综合了已发表的关于灰礁鲨在其地理分布范围内生活史的信息,并且首次尝试理清捕捞因素与板鳃亚纲物种地理变异对其生活史的贡献。对于帕尔米拉未被捕捞的灰礁鲨种群,冯·贝塔朗菲生长函数(VBGF)的生长系数k为0.05,渐近体长L∞为全长(TL)163.3厘米。最大体型是一条雌性鲨鱼的全长175.5厘米,雄性鲨鱼成熟时的体长估计为TL 116.7 - 123.2厘米,根据VBGF参数估计的最大寿命,两性合计为18.1年,年存活率为0.74年⁻¹。与对其他板鳃亚纲物种的研究结果一致,我们发现灰礁鲨报告的生活史特征存在显著的种内变异性。然而,与其他人的报告相反,我们没有发现生活史变异性随生物地理学或捕捞情况而呈现出一致的模式。最终,在灰礁鲨地理分布范围内观察到的生活史特征存在大量但尚未可预测的变异性,这表明可能需要进行区域管理,以设定可持续的捕捞目标,并在全球范围内恢复这种及其他鲨鱼物种。