The School of Biological Sciences, The University of Western Australia, Perth, Western Australia, Australia.
The UWA Oceans Institute, The University of Western Australia, Perth, Western Australia, Australia.
Conserv Biol. 2022 Apr;36(2):e13807. doi: 10.1111/cobi.13807. Epub 2021 Jul 27.
Marine fisheries in coastal ecosystems in many areas of the world have historically removed large-bodied individuals, potentially impairing ecosystem functioning and the long-term sustainability of fish populations. Reporting on size-based indicators that link to food-web structure can contribute to ecosystem-based management, but the application of these indicators over large (cross-ecosystem) geographical scales has been limited to either fisheries-dependent catch data or diver-based methods restricted to shallow waters (<20 m) that can misrepresent the abundance of large-bodied fished species. We obtained data on the body-size structure of 82 recreationally or commercially targeted marine demersal teleosts from 2904 deployments of baited remote underwater stereo-video (stereo-BRUV). Sampling was at up to 50 m depth and covered approximately 10,000 km of the continental shelf of Australia. Seascape relief, water depth, and human gravity (i.e., a proxy of human impacts) were the strongest predictors of the probability of occurrence of large fishes and the abundance of fishes above the minimum legal size of capture. No-take marine reserves had a positive effect on the abundance of fishes above legal size, although the effect varied across species groups. In contrast, sublegal fishes were best predicted by gradients in sea surface temperature (mean and variance). In areas of low human impact, large fishes were about three times more likely to be encountered and fishes of legal size were approximately five times more abundant. For conspicuous species groups with contrasting habitat, environmental, and biogeographic affinities, abundance of legal-size fishes typically declined as human impact increased. Our large-scale quantitative analyses highlight the combined importance of seascape complexity, regions with low human footprint, and no-take marine reserves in protecting large-bodied fishes across a broad range of species and ecosystem configurations.
在世界上许多地区的沿海生态系统中,海洋渔业历来捕捞大型个体,这可能会损害生态系统功能和鱼类种群的长期可持续性。报告基于与食物网结构相关的基于大小的指标,可以为基于生态系统的管理做出贡献,但这些指标在大(跨生态系统)地理尺度上的应用仅限于渔业相关的捕捞数据,或者仅限于潜水员在浅水区(<20 米)使用的方法,这些方法可能无法准确反映大型捕捞物种的丰度。我们从 2904 次诱饵远程水下立体视频(立体-BRUV)部署中获得了 82 种娱乐或商业目标海洋底层硬骨鱼的体型结构数据。采样深度高达 50 米,覆盖了澳大利亚大陆架约 10000 公里的海域。海域地形起伏、水深和人类重力(即人类影响的代表)是大型鱼类出现概率和超过最小可捕尺寸鱼类数量的最强预测因素。无捕捞海洋保护区对超过法定尺寸的鱼类数量有积极影响,尽管这种影响因物种组而异。相比之下,亚法规鱼类的数量最好通过海面温度(平均值和方差)梯度来预测。在人类影响较小的地区,大型鱼类的出现概率约为三倍,而法定尺寸的鱼类数量约为五倍。对于具有明显生态习性、环境和生物地理亲缘关系的不同物种组,随着人类影响的增加,法定尺寸鱼类的数量通常会减少。我们的大规模定量分析突出了景观复杂性、人类足迹少的区域和无捕捞海洋保护区在保护广泛物种和生态系统配置中大型鱼类方面的综合重要性。