Parrotfish sex ratios recover rapidly in Bermuda following a fishing ban

Parrotfishes are an ecologically and commercially important teleost group whose grazing contributes to maintaining coral-dominated states on hermatypic reefs. However, overfishing has skewed sex ratios of Atlantic parrotfishes because fishing has disproportionate impacts on larger individuals, and m...

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Veröffentlicht in:Coral reefs 2016-06, Vol.35 (2), p.421-425
Hauptverfasser: O’Farrell, Shay, Luckhurst, Brian E., Box, Stephen J., Mumby, Peter J.
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container_title Coral reefs
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creator O’Farrell, Shay
Luckhurst, Brian E.
Box, Stephen J.
Mumby, Peter J.
description Parrotfishes are an ecologically and commercially important teleost group whose grazing contributes to maintaining coral-dominated states on hermatypic reefs. However, overfishing has skewed sex ratios of Atlantic parrotfishes because fishing has disproportionate impacts on larger individuals, and males are generally larger than females. Whether protection from fishing may allow sex ratios to return to equilibrium is unknown, as fishing can induce irreversible ecological and/or evolutionary shifts. Bermuda banned trap fishing in 1990, creating a unique opportunity to analyse long-term responses of Atlantic parrotfishes to release from fishing. We found that sex ratios of four common parrotfishes were initially skewed, with male proportions ranging from 0.04 to 0.18. However, male proportions rebounded within 3–4 yr, equilibrating at values ranging from 0.36 to 0.54, similar to those reported at unfished sites in the region. Our results are encouraging for regional efforts to recover lost grazing function by restoring overfished herbivore populations.
doi_str_mv 10.1007/s00338-015-1389-5
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source SpringerNature Journals
subjects Aquatic ecosystems
Bans
Biomedical and Life Sciences
Commercial fishing
Coral reefs
Freshwater & Marine Ecology
Grazing
Life Sciences
Oceanography
Overfishing
title Parrotfish sex ratios recover rapidly in Bermuda following a fishing ban
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