4.5 Article

Fishing, predation, and temperature drive herring decline in a large marine ecosystem

期刊

ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION
卷 11, 期 24, 页码 18136-18150

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ece3.8411

关键词

Atlantic herring; climate change; ecosystem; ecosystem-based; egg predation; exploitation; fisheries; forage; herring

资金

  1. Department of Fisheries and Oceans Strategic Program for Ecosystem-Based Research and Advice [21714-805-120]
  2. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada [RGPGP-2015-00076]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Atlantic herring landings in Canada have been the greatest since 1960, with the Scotian Shelf-Bay of Fundy fishery being a major contributor. However, despite management measures implemented since 2003, herring biomass remains low and declining. Various factors such as exploitation rate, geographic distribution of fishing, and recruitment have been identified as key drivers of herring variability.
Since 1960, landings of Atlantic herring have been the greatest of any marine species in Canada, surpassing Atlantic cod and accounting for 24% of the total seafood harvested in Atlantic Canada. The Scotian Shelf-Bay of Fundy herring fisheries (NAFO Division 4VWX) is among Canada's oldest and drives this productivity, accounting for up to 75% of the total herring catch in some years. The stocks' productivity and overall health have declined since 1965. Despite management measures to promote recovery implemented since 2003, biomass remains low and is declining. The factors that drive the productivity of 4VWX herring are primarily unresolved, likely impeding the effectiveness of management actions on this stock. We evaluated potential drivers of herring variability by analyzing 52 time-series that describe the temporal and spatial evolution of the 4VWX herring population and the physical, ecological, and anthropogenic factors that could affect them using structural equation models. Variation in herring biomass was best accounted for by the exploitation rate's negative effect and the geographic distribution of fishing and recruitment. Thermal phenology and temperature adversely and egg predation positively impacted the early life stage mortality rate and, ultimately, adult biomass. These findings are broadly relevant to fisheries management, but particularly for 4VWX herring, where the current management approach does not consider their early life stage dynamics or assess them within the ecosystem or climate change contexts.

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