4.8 Article

Synergistic effects of harvest and climate drive synchronous somatic growth within key New Zealand fisheries

期刊

GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY
卷 27, 期 7, 页码 1470-1484

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/gcb.15490

关键词

climate change; density-dependent growth; dispersal; fishing; Moran Effect; otolith biochronology; Pacific Ocean; population dynamics; spatial synchrony

资金

  1. New Zealand Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment (MBIE) [C01X1619]
  2. Australian Academy of Sciences
  3. Australian Research Council [DP190101627]
  4. New Zealand Ministry of Business, Innovation & Employment (MBIE) [C01X1619] Funding Source: New Zealand Ministry of Business, Innovation & Employment (MBIE)

向作者/读者索取更多资源

This study demonstrates that fishing activities can initially promote individual growth but also potentially heighten the sensitivity of populations to environmental change. Fishing-induced release of density controls benefits individual growth across different fish species, and environmental factors can also have additional effects on growth rates.
Fisheries harvest has pervasive impacts on wild fish populations, including the truncation of size and age structures, altered population dynamics and density, and modified habitat and assemblage composition. Understanding the degree to which harvest-induced impacts increase the sensitivity of individuals, populations and ultimately species to environmental change is essential to ensuring sustainable fisheries management in a rapidly changing world. Here we generated multiple long-term (44-62 years), annually resolved, somatic growth chronologies of four commercially important fishes from New Zealand's coastal and shelf waters. We used these novel data to investigate how regional- and basin-scale environmental variability, in concert with fishing activity, affected individual somatic growth rates and the magnitude of spatial synchrony among stocks. Changes in somatic growth can affect individual fitness and a range of population and fishery metrics such as recruitment success, maturation schedules and stock biomass. Across all species, individual growth benefited from a fishing-induced release of density controls. For nearshore snapper and tarakihi, regional-scale wind and temperature also additively affected growth, indicating that future climate change-induced warming and potentially strengthened winds will initially promote the productivity of more poleward populations. Fishing increased the sensitivity of deep-water hoki and ling growth to the Interdecadal Pacific Oscillation (IPO). A forecast shift to a positive IPO phase, in concert with current harvest strategies, will likely promote individual hoki and ling growth. At the species level, historical fishing practices and IPO synergized to strengthen spatial synchrony in average growth between stocks separated by 400-600 nm of ocean. Increased spatial synchrony can, however, increase the vulnerability of stocks to deleterious stochastic events. Together, our individual- and species-level results show how fishing and environmental factors can conflate to initially promote individual growth but then possibly heighten the sensitivity of stocks to environmental change.

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