Department of Biosciences, University of Oslo, Oslo, Norway.
Glob Chang Biol. 2024 Mar;30(3):e17251. doi: 10.1111/gcb.17251.
Over the last decades, mass mortality events have become increasingly common across taxa with sometimes devastating effects on population biomass. In the aquatic environment, fish are sensitive to mass mortality events, particularly at the early life stages that are crucial for population dynamics. However, it has recently been shown for fish, that a single mass mortality event in early life typically does not lead to population collapse. Moreover, the frequency and intensity of extreme events that can cause mass mortality, such as marine heatwaves, are increasing. Here, we show that increasing frequency and intensity of mass mortality events may lead to population collapse. Since the drivers of mass mortality events are diverse, and often linked to climate change, it is challenging to predict the frequency and severity of future mass mortality events. As an alternative, we quantify the probability of population collapse depending on the frequency and intensity as well as the duration of mass mortality events. Based on 39 fish species, we show that the probability of collapse typically increases with increasing frequency, intensity, and duration of the mortality events. In addition, we show that the collapse depends on key traits such as natural mortality, recruitment variation, and density dependence. The presented framework provides quantitative estimates of the sensitivity of fish species to these increasingly common extreme events, which paves the way for potential mitigation actions to alleviate adverse impacts on harvested fish populations across the globe.
在过去的几十年中,大规模死亡事件在各分类群中变得越来越普遍,有时对种群生物量造成了毁灭性的影响。在水生环境中,鱼类对大规模死亡事件很敏感,特别是在对种群动态至关重要的早期生命阶段。然而,最近的研究表明,鱼类的单次早期大规模死亡事件通常不会导致种群崩溃。此外,能够导致大规模死亡的极端事件的频率和强度,如海洋热浪,正在增加。在这里,我们表明,大规模死亡事件的频率和强度的增加可能导致种群崩溃。由于大规模死亡事件的驱动因素多种多样,并且通常与气候变化有关,因此预测未来大规模死亡事件的频率和严重程度具有挑战性。作为替代方案,我们根据大规模死亡事件的频率、强度和持续时间来量化种群崩溃的概率。基于 39 种鱼类,我们表明,随着死亡率事件的频率、强度和持续时间的增加,崩溃的概率通常会增加。此外,我们还表明,崩溃取决于自然死亡率、补充变异和密度依赖性等关键特征。所提出的框架提供了鱼类物种对这些越来越普遍的极端事件的敏感性的定量估计,为减轻全球范围内捕捞鱼类种群的不利影响的潜在缓解措施铺平了道路。