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Interacting forces of predation and fishing affect species’ maturation size

1. Fishing is a strong selective force and is supposed to select for earlier maturation at smaller body size. However, the extent to which fishing‐induced evolution is shaping ecosystems remains debated. This is in part because it is challenging to disentangle fishing from other selective forces (e....

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Autores principales: Forestier, Romain, Blanchard, Julia L., Nash, Kirsty L., Fulton, Elizabeth A., Johnson, Craig, Audzijonyte, Asta
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7771143/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33391700
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ece3.6995
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author Forestier, Romain
Blanchard, Julia L.
Nash, Kirsty L.
Fulton, Elizabeth A.
Johnson, Craig
Audzijonyte, Asta
author_facet Forestier, Romain
Blanchard, Julia L.
Nash, Kirsty L.
Fulton, Elizabeth A.
Johnson, Craig
Audzijonyte, Asta
author_sort Forestier, Romain
collection PubMed
description 1. Fishing is a strong selective force and is supposed to select for earlier maturation at smaller body size. However, the extent to which fishing‐induced evolution is shaping ecosystems remains debated. This is in part because it is challenging to disentangle fishing from other selective forces (e.g., size‐structured predation and cannibalism) in complex ecosystems undergoing rapid change. 2. Changes in maturation size from fishing and predation have previously been explored with multi‐species physiologically structured models but assumed separation of ecological and evolutionary timescales. To assess the eco‐evolutionary impact of fishing and predation at the same timescale, we developed a stochastic physiologically size‐structured food‐web model, where new phenotypes are introduced randomly through time enabling dynamic simulation of species' relative maturation sizes under different types of selection pressures. 3. Using the model, we carried out a fully factorial in silico experiment to assess how maturation size would change in the absence and presence of both fishing and predation (including cannibalism). We carried out ten replicate stochastic simulations exposed to all combinations of fishing and predation in a model community of nine interacting fish species ranging in their maximum sizes from 10 g to 100 kg. We visualized and statistically analyzed the results using linear models. 4. The effects of fishing on maturation size depended on whether or not predation was enabled and differed substantially across species. Fishing consistently reduced the maturation sizes of two largest species whether or not predation was enabled and this decrease was seen even at low fishing intensities (F = 0.2 per year). In contrast, the maturation sizes of the three smallest species evolved to become smaller through time but this happened regardless of the levels of predation or fishing. For the four medium‐size species, the effect of fishing was highly variable with more species showing significant and larger fishing effects in the presence of predation. 5. Ultimately our results suggest that the interactive effects of predation and fishing can have marked effects on species' maturation sizes, but that, at least for the largest species, predation does not counterbalance the evolutionary effect of fishing. Our model also produced relative maturation sizes that are broadly consistent with empirical estimates for many fish species.
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spelling pubmed-77711432020-12-31 Interacting forces of predation and fishing affect species’ maturation size Forestier, Romain Blanchard, Julia L. Nash, Kirsty L. Fulton, Elizabeth A. Johnson, Craig Audzijonyte, Asta Ecol Evol Original Research 1. Fishing is a strong selective force and is supposed to select for earlier maturation at smaller body size. However, the extent to which fishing‐induced evolution is shaping ecosystems remains debated. This is in part because it is challenging to disentangle fishing from other selective forces (e.g., size‐structured predation and cannibalism) in complex ecosystems undergoing rapid change. 2. Changes in maturation size from fishing and predation have previously been explored with multi‐species physiologically structured models but assumed separation of ecological and evolutionary timescales. To assess the eco‐evolutionary impact of fishing and predation at the same timescale, we developed a stochastic physiologically size‐structured food‐web model, where new phenotypes are introduced randomly through time enabling dynamic simulation of species' relative maturation sizes under different types of selection pressures. 3. Using the model, we carried out a fully factorial in silico experiment to assess how maturation size would change in the absence and presence of both fishing and predation (including cannibalism). We carried out ten replicate stochastic simulations exposed to all combinations of fishing and predation in a model community of nine interacting fish species ranging in their maximum sizes from 10 g to 100 kg. We visualized and statistically analyzed the results using linear models. 4. The effects of fishing on maturation size depended on whether or not predation was enabled and differed substantially across species. Fishing consistently reduced the maturation sizes of two largest species whether or not predation was enabled and this decrease was seen even at low fishing intensities (F = 0.2 per year). In contrast, the maturation sizes of the three smallest species evolved to become smaller through time but this happened regardless of the levels of predation or fishing. For the four medium‐size species, the effect of fishing was highly variable with more species showing significant and larger fishing effects in the presence of predation. 5. Ultimately our results suggest that the interactive effects of predation and fishing can have marked effects on species' maturation sizes, but that, at least for the largest species, predation does not counterbalance the evolutionary effect of fishing. Our model also produced relative maturation sizes that are broadly consistent with empirical estimates for many fish species. John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2020-12-05 /pmc/articles/PMC7771143/ /pubmed/33391700 http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ece3.6995 Text en © 2020 The Authors. Ecology and Evolution published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd This is an open access article under the terms of the http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Original Research
Forestier, Romain
Blanchard, Julia L.
Nash, Kirsty L.
Fulton, Elizabeth A.
Johnson, Craig
Audzijonyte, Asta
Interacting forces of predation and fishing affect species’ maturation size
title Interacting forces of predation and fishing affect species’ maturation size
title_full Interacting forces of predation and fishing affect species’ maturation size
title_fullStr Interacting forces of predation and fishing affect species’ maturation size
title_full_unstemmed Interacting forces of predation and fishing affect species’ maturation size
title_short Interacting forces of predation and fishing affect species’ maturation size
title_sort interacting forces of predation and fishing affect species’ maturation size
topic Original Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7771143/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33391700
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ece3.6995
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