posted on 2024-03-22, 10:51authored byAnne Maria Eikeset, Erin Dunlop, Ulf Dieckmann
No abstracts are to be cited without prior reference to the author.
We explore the evolutionary effects of fisheries on North-East Arctic (NEA) cod. It has earlier been shown that fisheries can change the cod’s age and size at maturation in two ways: first, by reducing the biomass, which may lead to faster individual growth and thereby earlier maturation (through phenotypic plasticity), and secondly, by altering the selective pressures so the stock evolves towards maturing at a smaller size and younger age (i.e., shifting the maturation reaction norm). Shifts in maturation reactions norms can be rapid and estimating them can help disentangle plastic and evolutionary changes in the age and size at maturation, which is important from a management perspective, as genetic changes are likely more difficult to reverse. Using an individual-based, eco-genetic model, we predict how fishing pressure influences the evolution of immature somatic growth rates, reproductive investment, and the maturation reaction norms of NEA cod. This modeling approach is chosen because it allows the merging of genetics and demography, both of which are important in the context of fisheries-induced change (i.e., Chambers 1993; Dunlop et al. 2005; Jager 2001).