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Failure to detect ecological and evolutionary effects of harvest on exploited fish populations in a managed fisheries ecosystem

Tengiliður

Davíð Gíslason

Verkefnastjóri

davidg@matis.is

Höfundar: Fan Zhang, Davíð Gíslason, Kevin B. Reid, Allan J. Debertin, Katrine Turgeon, Thomas D. Nudds

Útgáfa: Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences

Útgáfuár: 2018

Samantekt:

Overexploitation and collapse of major fisheries raises important concerns about effects of harvest on fish populations. We tested for ecological and evolutionary mechanisms by which harvest could affect exploited fish populations in Lake Erie over the last four decades, over most of which intensive fisheries management was implemented. We did not detect evidence of long-term negative effects of harvest on yellow perch (Perca flavescens), walleye (Sander vitreus), white perch (Morone americana), or white bass (Morone chrysops) populations, either through recruitment success or through alteration of maturation schedules. Current fisheries management in Lake Erie has been relatively successful with respect to minimizing negative harvest effects, such that the dynamics of exploited fish populations in Lake Erie were more strongly affected by environment than harvest. Our study adds to the evidence that effective fisheries management is capable of rebuilding depleted fisheries and (or) maintaining healthy fisheries. Nevertheless, fisheries management needs to move beyond the ecological dimension to incorporate economic, social, and institutional aspects for society to be better assured of the sustainability of fisheries in rapidly changing ecosystems.

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