4.6 Article

Documenting Loss of Large Trophy Fish from the Florida Keys with Historical Photographs

Journal

CONSERVATION BIOLOGY
Volume 23, Issue 3, Pages 636-643

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1523-1739.2008.01152.x

Keywords

coral reefs; historical ecology; overfishing; reef fish; shifting baselines; arrecifes de coral; ecologia historica; directrices cambiantes; peces de arrecife; sobrepesca

Funding

  1. NOAA Preserve America Initiative
  2. Marine Sanctuaries Program
  3. Coral Reef Conservation Program
  4. National Centers for Coastal Ocean Science
  5. National Marine Fisheries Service
  6. OAR Cooperative Institute
  7. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency STAR Fellowship
  8. Census of Marine Life History of Marine Animal Populations

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A loss of large vertebrates has occurred in aquatic and terrestrial ecosystems, but data to measure long-term population changes are sparse. Historical photographs provide visual and quantitative evidence of changes in mean individual size and species composition for groups of marine fish that have been targeted by sport fishing. I measured such trends for 13 groups of recreationally caught trophy reef fish with photographs taken in Key West, Florida, from 1956 to 2007. The mean fish size declined from an estimated 19.9 kg (SE 1.5) to 2.3 kg (SE 0.3), and there was a major shift in species composition. Landings from 1956 to 1960 were dominated by large groupers (Epinephelus spp.), and other large predatory fish were commonly caught, including sharks with an average length of just < 2 m. In contrast, landings in 2007 were composed of small snappers (Lutjanus spp. and Ocyurus chrysurus) with an average length of 34.4 cm (SE 0.62), and the average length of sharks declined by more than 50% over 50 years. Major declines in the size of fish caught were not reflected in the price of fishing trips, so customers paid the same amount for a less-valuable product. Historical photographs provide a window into a more pristine coral reef ecosystem that existed a half a century ago and lend support to current observations that unfished reef communities are able to support large numbers of large-bodied fish.

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