Authors
Susan Lowerre‐Barbieri, Greg DeCelles, Pierre Pepin, Ignacio A Catalán, Barbara Muhling, Brad Erisman, Steven X Cadrin, Josep Alós, Andres Ospina‐Alvarez, Megan M Stachura, Michael D Tringali, Sarah Walters Burnsed, Claire B Paris
Publication date
2017/3
Journal
Fish and Fisheries
Volume
18
Issue
2
Pages
285-312
Description
A close relationship between adult abundance and stock productivity may not exist for many marine fish stocks, resulting in concern that the management goal of maximum sustainable yield is either inefficient or risky. Although reproductive success is tightly coupled with adult abundance and fecundity in many terrestrial animals, in exploited marine fish where and when fish spawn and consequent dispersal dynamics may have a greater impact. Here, we propose an eco‐evolutionary perspective, reproductive resilience, to understand connectivity and productivity in marine fish. Reproductive resilience is the capacity of a population to maintain the reproductive success needed to result in long‐term population stability despite disturbances. A stock's reproductive resilience is driven by the underlying traits in its spawner‐recruit system, selected for over evolutionary timescales, and the ecological context within which it …
Total citations
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