4.6 Article

A long road to recovery: dynamics and ecology of the marbled rockcod (Notothenia rossii, family: Nototheniidae) at South Georgia, 50 years after overexploitation

Journal

ICES JOURNAL OF MARINE SCIENCE
Volume 78, Issue 8, Pages 2745-2756

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/icesjms/fsab150

Keywords

Diet analysis; Nototheniidae; Notothenia rossii; Over-exploitation; Trawl survey

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Exploitation has caused overexploitation in South Georgia since its discovery in 1775, leading to significant declines in living resources like the marbled rockcod. However, recent data has shown a sustained increase in the marbled rockcod population since the prohibition of targeted fishing in 1985. The dynamic ecosystem and trophic relationships play a crucial role in influencing the recovery of the species.
Exploitation is one of the major drivers of change in marine ecosystems. Following discovery in 1775, South Georgia saw sequential overexploitation of living resources, including seals, whales, and fish. Although exploitation is now tightly regulated, the ecosystem is still recovering. Marbled rockcod, Notothenia rossii (Richardson 1844), was the first fish species to be commercially exploited and high catches between 1967 and 1972 resulted in dramatic stock decline. Here, we use 30 years of trawl survey data to provide the first evidence of a sustained increase in the N. rossii population starting two decades after the prohibition of targeted fishing in 1985. The way species respond to change is mediated in part by trophic relationships with other organisms. We present the first multi-year, spatially-resolved comparison of adult N. rossii diet at South Georgia, highlighting a variable diet with less reliance on Antarctic krill than previously thought. Life history factors and possible heavy predation on early life stages might have delayed their recovery while diet plasticity potentially supported recent population growth. Due to the dynamic ecosystem at South Georgia and questions over catch reports from the period of heaviest exploitation, it is unlikely the current ecosystem could support a recovery to estimated pre-exploitation levels.

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