Clements Christopher F, Blanchard Julia L, Nash Kirsty L, Hindell Mark A, Ozgul Arpat
Department of Evolutionary Biology and Environmental Studies, University of Zurich, Zurich 8057, Switzerland.
Institute for Marine and Antarctic Studies, University of Tasmania, Private Bag 129, Hobart, Tasmania 7001, Australia.
Nat Ecol Evol. 2017 Jun 22;1(7):188. doi: 10.1038/s41559-017-0188.
Predicting population declines is a key challenge in the face of global environmental change. Abundance-based early warning signals have been shown to precede population collapses; however, such signals are sensitive to the low reliability of abundance estimates. Here, using historical data on whales harvested during the 20th century, we demonstrate that early warning signals can be present not only in the abundance data, but also in the more reliable body size data of wild populations. We show that during the period of commercial whaling, the mean body size of caught whales declined dramatically (by up to 4 m over a 70-year period), leading to early warning signals being detectable up to 40 years before the global collapse of whale stocks. Combining abundance and body size data can reduce the length of the time series required to predict collapse, and decrease the chances of false positive early warning signals.
面对全球环境变化,预测种群数量下降是一项关键挑战。基于丰度的早期预警信号已被证明先于种群崩溃出现;然而,此类信号对丰度估计的低可靠性较为敏感。在此,利用20世纪捕鲸的历史数据,我们证明早期预警信号不仅可以出现在丰度数据中,也可以出现在野生种群更可靠的体型数据中。我们表明,在商业捕鲸期间,被捕鲸鱼的平均体型急剧下降(70年间下降多达4米),导致在全球鲸鱼种群崩溃前40年就能检测到早期预警信号。结合丰度和体型数据可以减少预测崩溃所需的时间序列长度,并降低误报早期预警信号的可能性。