School of Aquatic & Fishery Sciences, University of Washington, Seattle, WA 98195, USA; Visiting Scientist at Northwest Fisheries Science Center, National Marine Fisheries Service, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, 2725 Montlake Boulevard East, Seattle, WA 98112, USA.
School of Aquatic & Fishery Sciences, University of Washington, Seattle, WA 98195, USA.
Curr Biol. 2017 Sep 25;27(18):2843-2848.e2. doi: 10.1016/j.cub.2017.07.069. Epub 2017 Sep 14.
Researchers have long recognized the importance of ecological differences at the species level in structuring natural communities yet until recently have often overlooked the influence of intraspecific trait variation, which can profoundly alter community dynamics [1]. Human extraction of living resources can reduce intraspecific trait variation by, for example, causing truncation of age and size structure of populations, where numbers of older individuals decline far more with exploitation than younger individuals. Age truncation can negatively affect population and community stability, increasing variability in population and community biomass [2-6], reducing productivity [7-10] and life-history diversity in traits such as the spatial and temporal pattern of reproduction and migration [4, 11-16]. Here, we quantified the extent of age truncation in 63 fished populations across five ocean regions, as measured by how much the proportions of fish in the oldest age groups declined over time. The proportion of individuals in the oldest age classes decreased significantly in 79% to 97% of populations (compared to historical or unfished values, respectively), and the magnitude of decline was greater than 90% in 32% to 41% of populations. The pervasiveness and intensity of age truncation indicates that fishing is likely reducing the stability of many marine communities. Our findings suggest that more emphasis should be given to management measures that reduce the impact of fishing on age truncation, including no-take areas, slot limits that prohibit fishing on all except a narrow range of fish sizes, and rotational harvesting.
研究人员早就认识到物种水平的生态差异在构建自然群落结构方面的重要性,但直到最近,他们往往忽视了种内特征变异的影响,这种变异可以深刻改变群落动态[1]。人类对生物资源的开采会减少种内特征变异,例如导致种群的年龄和大小结构的截断,在这种情况下,随着捕捞的进行,老年个体的数量比年轻个体下降得更多。年龄截断会对种群和群落的稳定性产生负面影响,增加种群和群落生物量的变异性[2-6],降低生产力[7-10],并减少繁殖和迁移等特征的生活史多样性[4,11-16]。在这里,我们通过衡量最老年龄组的鱼类比例随时间的下降程度,量化了五个海洋区域的 63 个捕捞种群的年龄截断程度。与历史或未捕捞种群相比,最老年龄组的个体比例在 79%至 97%的种群中显著下降[17],在 32%至 41%的种群中,下降幅度超过 90%。年龄截断的普遍性和强度表明,捕捞可能正在降低许多海洋群落的稳定性。我们的研究结果表明,应更加重视减少捕捞对年龄截断影响的管理措施,包括禁渔区、禁止捕捞所有除了狭窄的鱼类大小范围的插槽限制,以及轮流捕捞。