Sørdalen Tonje K, Halvorsen Kim T, Harrison Hugo B, Ellis Charlie D, Vøllestad Leif Asbjørn, Knutsen Halvor, Moland Even, Olsen Esben M
Department of Biology Centre for Ecological and Evolutionary Synthesis (CEES) University of Oslo Oslo Norway.
Department of Natural Sciences Centre for Coastal Research (CCR) University of Agder Kristiansand Norway.
Evol Appl. 2018 Mar 22;11(6):963-977. doi: 10.1111/eva.12611. eCollection 2018 Jul.
Removing individuals from a wild population can affect the availability of prospective mates and the outcome of competitive interactions, with subsequent effects on mating patterns and sexual selection. Consequently, the rate of harvest-induced evolution is predicted to be strongly dependent on the strength and dynamics of sexual selection, yet there is limited empirical knowledge on the interplay between selective harvesting and the mating systems of exploited species. In this study, we used genetic parentage assignment to compare mating patterns of the highly valued and overexploited European lobster () in a designated lobster reserve and nearby fished area in southern Norway. In the area open to fishing, the fishery is regulated by a closed season, a minimum legal size and a ban on the harvest of egg-bearing females. Due to the differences in size and sex-specific fishing mortality between the two areas, males and females are of approximately equal average size in the fished area, whereas males tend to be larger in the reserve. Our results show that females would mate with males larger than their own body size, but the relative size difference was significantly larger in the reserve. Sexual selection acted positively on both body size and claw size in males in the reserve, while it was nonsignificant in fished areas. This strongly suggests that size truncation of males by fishing reduces the variability of traits that sexual selection acts upon. If fisheries continue to target large individuals (particularly males) with higher relative reproductive success, the weakening of sexual selection will likely accelerate fisheries-induced evolution towards smaller body size.
从野生种群中移除个体可能会影响潜在配偶的可得性以及竞争互动的结果,进而影响交配模式和性选择。因此,预计捕捞导致的进化速率将强烈依赖于性选择的强度和动态变化,然而,关于选择性捕捞与被开发物种交配系统之间的相互作用,实证知识有限。在本研究中,我们利用基因亲权鉴定来比较挪威南部一个指定龙虾保护区和附近捕捞区中极有价值且过度捕捞的欧洲龙虾()的交配模式。在开放捕捞区域,渔业受到禁渔期、法定最小尺寸以及禁止捕捞怀卵雌虾的规定的管理。由于两个区域在体型和性别特异性捕捞死亡率上存在差异,在捕捞区域雄性和雌性的平均体型大致相等,而在保护区雄性往往体型更大。我们的结果表明,雌性会与比自己体型大的雄性交配,但保护区内的相对体型差异显著更大。性选择对保护区内雄性的体型和螯大小都有正向作用,而在捕捞区域则不显著。这强烈表明,捕捞导致的雄性体型截短降低了性选择作用的性状变异性。如果渔业继续以具有较高相对繁殖成功率的大型个体(特别是雄性)为目标,性选择的减弱可能会加速渔业导致的向更小体型的进化。