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Life-history Strategies of Fishes and their Relevance to Ecosystem-Based Fisheries Management Rainer Froese IfM-GEOMAR [email protected] Content • What are life-history strategies? – Choice of key traits – Correlation of traits – Dealing with bias • Exploring life-history space • Ecosystems and life-history strategies • Implications for ecosystem-based fisheries management Key Trait: Size Frequency 3000 Small < 6.6 cm Medium 6.6 - 46 Large 46 - 323 very large > 323 cm 2000 1000 23,603 species geom. mean 17.4 cm 0 0.0 0.5 1.0 1.5 2.0 Length (log; cm) 2.5 3.0 3.5 Size Distribution is Multi-Modal Cumming and Havlicek (2002) Frequency 1500 1000 500 0 0.0 0.5 1.0 1.5 2.0 Length (log; cm) 2.5 3.0 3.5 Key Trait: Trophic Level Frequency 1500 herbivore omnivore low-level predator mid-level predator toppredator 1000 500 7,161 species 0 2.0 2.5 3.0 3.5 Trophic level 4.0 4.5 5.0 Key Trait: Productivity (modified after Musick 1999) Parameter High Medium Low Very low rmax (1/year) > 0.5 0.16 – 0.50 0.05 – 0.15 < 0.05 td (years) <1.4 1.4 - 4.4 4.5 - 14 > 14 Interest rate (%) > 65 17 – 65 5 - 16 <5 K (1/year) > 0.3 0.16 – 0.30 0.05 – 0.15 < 0.05 > 10,000 100 – 1000 10 – 100 < 10 <1 2–4 5 – 10 > 10 1–3 4 – 10 11 – 30 > 30 Fecundity (1/year) tm (years) tmax (years) Key Traits: Productivity Productivity Species Percent r’ max Very low 263 10.5 0.025 Low 1016 40.5 0.1 Medium 879 25.0 0.23 High 353 14.0 0.75 2,511 species Productivity is a Proxy for Metabolism Oxygen consumption (mg/kg/h) (routine metabolism of 175 species) 10000 1000 100 10 1 High 2 Medium 3 Low Productivity 4 Very low Trait Correlation: Size vs Troph 10000 Length (cm) 1000 100 10 1 1 Herb 2 Omni 3 Low 4 Mid Trophic groups 5 Top Trait Correlation: Size vs Productivity 10000 Length (cm) 1000 100 10 1 1 Very low 2 Low 3 Medium Productivity groups 4 High Trait Correlation: Trophic Level vs Productivity Trophic level 5.0 4.0 3.0 2.0 1 Very low 2 Low 3 Medium Productivity groups 4 High Available Data are Biased • Combined available data for 1,880 species are biased towards large, commercial, northern-hemisphere, temperate species • Solution: Use modelling approach to expand data base Expanding the Database: Trophic Level 5 Top Trophic level 4.5 Medium 4 Low 3.5 3 2.5 2 1 10 100 1000 Length (cm) Trophic level of 97 species of Genus Epinephelus as a function of their body length. Residuals of Modelled Troph 2500 Frequency 2000 1500 1000 500 0 -2 -1 0 1 SpeciesTroph (log; n) Residual 2 3 Expanding the Database: Productivity (K) 10 High K (1/year) Medium 1 Low .1 Very low .01 1 10 100 1000 Length (cm) Von Bertalanffy growth parameter K plotted over maximum length for Family Serranidae Modelled vs Observed K K predicted (1/year) 10.0 1.0 0.1 0.0 0.01 0.10 1.00 K observed (1/year) 10.00 Life-History Strategies • The extended data set contains 20,480 species, nearing a census • Bias towards large northern species has disappeared • Of 80 possible combinations of traits only 50 are used • Three strategies are used by 60% of the species Occupation of Size-Troph Space 12000 10000 8000 6000 4000 Top Mid Low Omni Herb 2000 0 Small Medium Large Very large Occupation of Size-Productivity Space 10000 8000 6000 4000 2000 High Medium Low 0 Small Medium Very low Large Very large Occupation of Troph-Productivity Space 10000 8000 6000 4000 2000 High Medium Low 0 Herb Omni Low Very low Mid Top Goals of Ecosystem-based Fisheries Management • Sustainable and productive fisheries • Minimum impact on the ecosystem • Ecosystem as close to unfished state as possible Interrelationship of Ecosystems and Life-history Strategies (I) Selection theory Environment r-K Succession Temperature Number of species Size Productivity variable small high stable large low Trophic diversity less mature low small high low mature high large low high high temp. high small high low temp. low large low Interrelationship of Ecosystems and Life-history Strategies (II) • No relationship between fecundity and reproductive success in highly-fecund bony fishes (Froese and Luna 2004) • Fecundity balances typical pre-adult mortality in the respective environment (Beverton 1991) • Longevity has evolved to survive periods unfavourable for recruitment (Longhurst 2002) • Abundance increases with productivity and decreases with size (Froese 2005) Impact of Fishing • Fishing strongly alters the size spectrum of ecosystems (and populations) (Froese et al. 2000) • Fishing reduces trophic diversity (fishing down the food web) (Pauly et al. 1998) • Fishing strongly alters relative abundances, with collapse of previously abundant species, ‘outbreak’ of rare species (Bakun 2005) Fishing Down the Food Web Goals of Ecosystem-based Fisheries • • • • • • • Minimize direct impact on the environment Rebuild & preserve size spectrum Rebuild & preserve trophic diversity Rebuild & preserve productivity -- Don’t catch juveniles -- Protect Mega-spawners -- Only catch proportion of fish with optimum size, after first and before second spawning How ? • • • • • • Establish no-take zones Use non-destructive gears Use size-selective gears Use knowledge and technology Create incentives for ‘good’ fishing Involve stakeholders in monitoring and management Thanks to the FishBase Team Thanks to our Donors Reality Check DG Fish recommendation for TAC 2006: 28,400 tons (+ 15%) Thank You • Comments? • Questions?