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Caught in the middle: bottom-up and top-down processes impacting recruitment in a small pelagic fish

Journal

REVIEWS IN FISH BIOLOGY AND FISHERIES
Volume 33, Issue 1, Pages 55-84

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11160-022-09739-2

Keywords

Atlantic herring; Clupea harengus; Baltic Sea; Early life stages of fishes

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Understanding the drivers behind fish population fluctuations is crucial in fishery science. Despite the complexity of interacting factors, a holistic approach combining field, experimental, and modeling efforts can provide a mechanistic understanding of these recruitment drivers. The Western Baltic Spring-Spawning herring exemplifies the power of this approach, with habitat compression and warming being the major drivers, along with other factors such as climate events and new predators. Identifying knowledge gaps and conducting specific research within these areas is important for sustainable management of fish stocks.
Understanding the drivers behind fluctuations in fish populations remains a key objective in fishery science. Our predictive capacity to explain these fluctuations is still relatively low, due to the amalgam of interacting bottom-up and top-down factors, which vary across time and space among and within populations. Gaining a mechanistic understanding of these recruitment drivers requires a holistic approach, combining field, experimental and modelling efforts. Here, we use the Western Baltic Spring-Spawning (WBSS) herring (Clupea harengus) to exemplify the power of this holistic approach and the high complexity of the recruitment drivers (and their interactions). Since the early 2000s, low recruitment levels have promoted intense research on this stock. Our literature synthesis suggests that the major drivers are habitat compression of the spawning beds (due to eutrophication and coastal modification mainly) and warming, which indirectly leads to changes in spawning phenology, prey abundance and predation pressure. Other factors include increased intensity of extreme climate events and new predators in the system. Four main knowledge gaps were identified related to life-cycle migration and habitat use, population structure and demographics, life-stage specific impact of multi-stressors, and predator-prey interactions. Specific research topics within these areas are proposed, as well as the priority to support a sustainable management of the stock. Given that the Baltic Sea is severely impacted by warming, eutrophication and altered precipitation, WBSS herring could be a harbinger of potential effects of changing environmental drivers to the recruitment of small pelagic fishes in other coastal areas in the world.

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