Litcius/Paper detail

Size does matter — the eco-evolutionary effects of changing body size in fish

Pauliina A. Ahti, Anna Kuparinen, Silva Uusi‐Heikkilä

2020Environmental Reviews80 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Body size acts as a proxy for many fitness-related traits. Body size is also subject to directional selection from various anthropogenic stressors such as increasing water temperature, decreasing dissolved oxygen, fisheries, as well as natural predators. Changes in individual body size correlate with changes in fecundity, behaviour, and survival and can propagate through populations and ecosystems by truncating age and size structures and changing predator–prey dynamics. In this review, we will explore the causes and consequences of changing body size in fish in the light of recent literature and relevant theories. We will investigate the central role of body size in ecology by first discussing the main selective agents that influence body size: fishing, increasing water temperature, decreasing dissolved oxygen, and predation. We will then explore the impacts of these changes at the individual, population, and ecosystem levels. Considering the relatively high heritability of body size, we will discuss how a change in body size can leave a genetic signature in the population and translate to a change in the evolutionary potential of the species.

Topics & Concepts

PredationEcologyBiologyEcosystemPopulation sizeFishingPopulationFecunditySociologyDemographyFish Ecology and Management StudiesPhysiological and biochemical adaptationsMarine and fisheries research