Authors
Arnault Le Bris, Andrew J Pershing, Christina M Hernandez, Katherine E Mills, Graham D Sherwood
Publication date
2015/11/1
Journal
ICES Journal of Marine Science
Volume
72
Issue
9
Pages
2590-2599
Publisher
Oxford University Press
Description
Preserving larger fish is often advocated as a conservation measure to help fish populations buffer environmental variation and fishing pressure. The rationale is that several size- and age-dependent reproductive traits confer a higher reproductive value to larger fish. The effects of variation in these reproductive traits on the dynamics of populations under various fishing patterns are however seldom evaluated. In this study, we develop a simulation model to evaluate how variation in three reproductive traits (fecundity–mass, hatching probability, and batch spawning) impacts the capacity of a fish population to withstand and recover from high fishing pressure. Biological functions of the model were calibrated based on the Gulf of Maine Atlantic cod stock, which is currently experiencing its lowest biomass level ever estimated. Results showed that variation in the shape of the fecundity–mass relationship had the …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
A Le Bris, AJ Pershing, CM Hernandez, KE Mills… - ICES Journal of Marine Science, 2015