Hardison Sean B, Lefcheck Jonathan S, White Shelby B, Liang Maowei, Zhang Y Stacy, Patrick Christopher J, Scheld Andrew M, Latour Robert J, Fodrie F Joel, Anderson Sean C, Castorani Max C N
Department of Environmental Sciences, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Virginia, USA.
College of Fisheries and Ocean Sciences, University of Alaska Fairbanks, Juneau, Alaska, USA.
Ecol Appl. 2025 Sep;35(6):e70097. doi: 10.1002/eap.70097.
Biodiversity can confer temporal stability to ecosystem processes through asynchrony in species' abundances and may promote asynchrony and stability of commercial fishing harvests derived from exploited species. However, the linkages between asynchrony in the population dynamics of commercially harvested species and asynchrony of associated harvests have been difficult to resolve due to ecological, social, and economic dynamics that mediate resource extraction. Here, we explored coupled human-ecological relationships and emergent asynchrony using commercial fishing harvest data and fisheries-independent trawl surveys in two regions (Maryland and Virginia) of Chesapeake Bay, USA, from 2002 to 2018. For each region, we sought to identify how seasonal (within-year) asynchrony among harvested fish species contributed to (1) seasonal asynchrony in the harvests of these species and (2) within-year stability and economic value of harvests. We found that, in Maryland, seasonal closure of striped bass (Morone saxatilis) fishing resulted in asynchrony by forcing switching to alternative stocks. In Virginia, seasonal migration of harvested species to and from the Chesapeake Bay promoted harvest compensation and therefore harvest asynchrony. However, this effect was negated by the concurrent effects of an increase in the evenness of species dynamics on harvest compensation, reflecting changes in fishing patterns, primarily following declines in the biomass of Atlantic croaker (Micropogonias undulatus). Our findings show that both social (direct management actions and behavioral responses) and emergent properties of ecological systems can influence asynchrony in dynamics of exploited populations and commercial harvests, with implications for their continued management and sustainability.
生物多样性可通过物种丰度的异步性赋予生态系统过程时间稳定性,并可能促进源自被开发物种的商业捕鱼收获量的异步性和稳定性。然而,由于介导资源开采的生态、社会和经济动态,商业捕捞物种种群动态的异步性与相关收获量的异步性之间的联系一直难以厘清。在此,我们利用2002年至2018年美国切萨皮克湾两个地区(马里兰州和弗吉尼亚州)的商业捕鱼收获数据和独立于渔业的拖网调查,探讨了人类 - 生态耦合关系及出现的异步性。对于每个地区,我们试图确定被捕捞鱼类物种之间的季节性(年内)异步性如何促成(1)这些物种收获量的季节性异步性,以及(2)年内收获量的稳定性和经济价值。我们发现,在马里兰州,条纹鲈(Morone saxatilis)捕捞的季节性关闭通过迫使转向替代种群而导致了异步性。在弗吉尼亚州,被捕捞物种往返切萨皮克湾的季节性洄游促进了收获补偿,从而促进了收获量的异步性。然而,物种动态均匀度增加对收获补偿的同时影响抵消了这种效应,这反映了捕鱼模式的变化,主要是在大西洋黄鱼(Micropogonias undulatus)生物量下降之后。我们的研究结果表明,社会因素(直接管理行动和行为反应)以及生态系统的涌现特性均可影响被开发种群动态和商业收获量的异步性,这对它们的持续管理和可持续性具有重要意义。