4.8 Article

The battle between harvest and natural selection creates small and shy fish

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2009451118

Keywords

boldness; reproductive fitness; harvest selection; telemetry; timidity

Funding

  1. Adaptfish (Leibniz-Community)
  2. Boddenhecht grant (European Maritime and Fisheries Fund of the European Union)
  3. Boddenhecht grant (State of Mecklenburg-Vorpommern) [MV-I.18-LM -004, B 730117000069]

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In a natural population of northern pike, both harvest selection and natural selection affect body size and behavior, with harvest selection favoring smaller and negatively impacting size, as well as having a behavioral component independent of body length. Traditional minimum size-based harvest limits are unlikely to counteract harvest selection effectively, suggesting that recreational fisheries may favor small, inactive, shy, and difficult-to-capture fish.
Harvest of fish and wildlife, both commercial and recreational, is a selective force that can induce evolutionary changes to life history and behavior. Naturally selective forces may create countering selection pressures. Assessing natural fitness represents a considerable challenge in broadcast spawners. Thus, our understanding about the relative strength of natural and fisheries selection is slim. In the field, we compared the strength and shape of harvest selection to natural selection on body size over four years and behavior over one year in a natural population of a freshwater top predator, the northern pike (Esox lucius). Natural selection was approximated by relative reproductive success via parent-offspring genetic assignments over four years. Harvest selection was measured by comparing individuals susceptible to recreational angling with individuals never captured by this gear type. Individual behavior was measured by high-resolution acoustic telemetry. Harvest and natural size selection operated with equal strength but opposing directions, and harvest size selection was consistently negative in all study years. Harvest selection also had a substantial behavioral component independent of body length, while natural behavioral selection was not documented, suggesting the potential for directional harvest selection favoring inactive, timid fish. Simulations of the outcomes of different fishing regulations showed that traditional minimum size-based harvest limits are unlikely to counteract harvest selection without being completely restrictive. Our study suggests harvest selection may be inevitable and recreational fisheries may thus favor small, inactive, shy, and difficult-to-capture fish. Increasing fractions of shy fish in angling-exploited stocks would have consequences for stock assessment and all fisheries operating with hook and line.

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