Litcius/Paper detail

Multigenerational exposure to warming and fishing causes recruitment collapse, but size diversity and periodic cooling can aid recovery

Henry F. Wootton, Asta Audzijonytė, John R. Morrongiello

2021Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences34 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

) populations over six consecutive generations. Warming advanced development rates across generations, but after three generations, it caused a sudden and large (30-50%) decline in recruitment. This warming impact was most severe in populations where size-selective harvesting reduced the average size of spawners. We then explored whether our observed recruitment decline could be explained by changes in egg size, early egg and larval survival, population sex ratio, and developmental costs. We found that it was most likely driven by temperature-induced shifts in embryonic development rate and fishing-induced male-biased sex ratios. Importantly, once harvest and warming were relaxed, recruitment rates rapidly recovered. Our study suggests that the effects of warming and fishing could have strong impacts on wild stock recruitment, but this may take several generations to manifest. However, resilience of wild populations may be higher if fishing preserves sufficient body size diversity, and windows of suitable temperature periodically occur.

Topics & Concepts

Diversity (politics)FishingGlobal warmingEnvironmental scienceClimate changeBiologyEcologyPolitical scienceLawPhysiological and biochemical adaptationsOcean Acidification Effects and ResponsesMarine Bivalve and Aquaculture Studies
Multigenerational exposure to warming and fishing causes recruitment collapse, but size diversity and periodic cooling can aid recovery | Litcius