Fisheries-Induced Evolution

Increased mortality from fishing is expected to favor faster life histories, realized through earlier maturation, increased reproductive investment, and reduced postmaturation growth. There is also direct and indirect selection on behavioral traits. Molecular genetic methods have so far contributed...

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Veröffentlicht in:Annual review of ecology, evolution, and systematics evolution, and systematics, 2015-12, Vol.46 (1), p.461-480
Hauptverfasser: Heino, Mikko, Díaz Pauli, Beatriz, Dieckmann, Ulf
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Díaz Pauli, Beatriz
Dieckmann, Ulf
description Increased mortality from fishing is expected to favor faster life histories, realized through earlier maturation, increased reproductive investment, and reduced postmaturation growth. There is also direct and indirect selection on behavioral traits. Molecular genetic methods have so far contributed minimally to understanding such fisheries-induced evolution (FIE), but a large body of literature studying evolution using phenotypic methods has suggested that FIE in life-history traits, in particular maturation traits, is commonplace in exploited fish populations. Although no phenotypic study in the wild can individually provide conclusive evidence for FIE, the observed common pattern suggests a common explanation, strengthening the case for FIE. This interpretation is supported by theoretical and experimental studies. Evidence for FIE of behavioral traits is limited from the wild, but strong from experimental studies. We suggest that such evolution is also common, but has so far been overlooked.
doi_str_mv 10.1146/annurev-ecolsys-112414-054339
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subjects Animal populations
applied evolution
behavior
Evolution
Fish populations
Fisheries
Life history
life-history theory
Maturation
Mortality
phenotypic change
selection
title Fisheries-Induced Evolution
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