| Literature DB >> 25567896 |
Neala W Kendall1, Jeffrey J Hard2, Thomas P Quinn1.
Abstract
Life history traits of wild animals can be strongly influenced, both phenotypically and evolutionarily, by hunting and fishing. However, few studies have quantified fishery selection over long time periods. We used 57 years of catch and escapement data to document the magnitude of and trends in gillnet selection on age and size at maturity of a commercially and biologically important sockeye salmon stock. Overall, the fishery has caught larger fish than have escaped to spawn, but selection has varied over time, becoming weaker and less consistent recently. Selection patterns were strongly affected by fish age and sex, in addition to extrinsic factors including fish abundance, mesh size regulations, and fish length variability. These results revealed a more complex and changing pattern of selective harvest than the 'larger is more vulnerable' model, emphasizing the need for quantified, multi-year studies before conclusions can be drawn about potential evolutionary and ecological effects of fishery selection. Furthermore, the results indicate that biologically robust escapement goals and prevention of harvest of the largest individuals may help prevent negative effects of size-selective harvest.Entities:
Keywords: Pacific salmon; fisheries management; fishery selection; harvest; life history evolution; size selection
Year: 2009 PMID: 25567896 PMCID: PMC3352444 DOI: 10.1111/j.1752-4571.2009.00086.x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Evol Appl ISSN: 1752-4571 Impact factor: 5.183
Figure 1The five fishing districts, and associated freshwater systems, of Bristol Bay, Alaska, including the Nushagak District.
Figure 2Number of sockeye salmon in the Nushagak District run and proportion of the run caught by the fishery, 1946–2005.
Figure 3Proportion of the Nushagak District sockeye salmon run caught of (A) all ages, (B) ocean age 2, and (C) ocean age 3 as a function of ocean age and sex, 1963–2005.
Figure 4Length vulnerability profiles of female (A) and male (B) sockeye salmon of all ages from 1946 to 2005 in the Nushagak District. Dotted black lines indicate the 95% confidence intervals; data were insufficient for calculations in the early years.
Figure 5Standardized selection differentials for female and male sockeye salmon of all ages (1946–2005) and ocean age 2 and 3 (1963–2005) of the Nushagak District. Error bars represent 95% confidence intervals.
Models that best predicted standardized selection differentials (SSDs) for sockeye salmon in the Nushagak District, 1963–2005, based on AICc and R2 values
| Group | Model | ΔAICC | How SSD is affected ( | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ocean age 2 females | Length deviation | 0 | 0.301 | |
| Length deviation & run size | 0.905 | 0.349 | ||
| Gillnet mesh size regulation & run size | 1.381 | 0.335 | ||
| Ocean age 2 males | Length deviation & AR1 | 0 | 0.306 | |
| Gillnet mesh size regulation & AR1 | 0.444 | 0.3 | ||
| Gillnet mesh size regulation, length deviation, & AR1 | 1.385 | 0.328 | ||
| Ocean age 3 females | Gillnet mesh size regulation & run size | 0 | 0.537 | |
| Gillnet mesh size regulation, run size, & length deviation | 1.774 | 0.545 | ||
| Ocean age 3 males | Gillnet mesh size regulation & run size | 0 | 0.54 | |
| Gillnet mesh size regulation, run size, & length deviation | 0.463 | 0.562 |
AICc, Akaike Information Criterion with a second order correction; AR1, significant first-order autocorrelation coefficient.
Figure 6Proportion of ocean age 3 sockeye salmon in the Nushagak District run (the vast majority of the remaining fish are of ocean age 2), 1963–2005.