Fisheries-induced trends in reaction norms for maturation in North Sea plaice
Working paper
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http://hdl.handle.net/11250/100529Utgivelsesdato
2002Metadata
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Sammendrag
We analyse the potential of intensive exploitation to have caused evolutionary
changes in the age and length at maturation in North Sea plaice Pleuronectes platessa.
Such evolutionary change in the onset of maturation is expected given that fishing
mortality is more than four times higher than natural mortality. In order to disentangle
phenotypic plasticity from evolutionary change, we employ the probabilistic reactionnorm
approach. This technique allows us to estimate the probabilities of maturing at
each relevant age and size, and to disentangle the plasticity in age and size at
maturation that results from changes in growth rates from evolutionary changes in
maturation propensities themselves. This recently developed method is here applied to
females of 41 cohorts (1955-1995) of North Sea plaice. We focus on trends in fishing
mortality, in growth rates, and in the probabilities of maturing, and test the hypothesis
that the decrease in age and length at maturation is partly caused by fisheries-induced
adaptive change. We find that the reaction norm for age and length at maturation has
indeed significantly shifted towards younger age and smaller length. The reactionnorm
analysis suggests a picture in which short-term fluctuations originating from
plastic responses are superimposed on a persistent long-term trend resulting from
genetic responses.
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ICES CM documents2002/Y:04