Changes in the North Sea fish community: evidence of indirect effects of fishing?

Author:

Daan Niels1,Gislason Henrik2,G. Pope John3,C. Rice Jake4

Affiliation:

1. Netherlands Institute for Fishery Investigations PO Box 68, 1970 AB, The Netherlands

2. Danish Institute for Fishery Research, Charlottenlund Slot DK-2920 Charlottenlund, Denmark

3. The Old Rectory Staithe Road, Burgh St. Peter, Beccles, Suffolk NR34 0BT, England, UK

4. DFO Science Advisory Secretariat, Department of Fisheries and Oceans 200 Kent Street, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada K1A 0E6

Abstract

Abstract We investigate changes in the North Sea fish community with particular reference to possible indirect effects of fishing, mediated through the ecosystem. In the past, long-term changes in the slope of size spectra of research vessel catches have been related to changes in fishing effort, but such changes may simply reflect the cumulative, direct effects of fishing through selective removal of large individuals. If there is resilience in a fish community towards fishing, we may expect increases in specific components, for instance as a consequence of an associated reduction in predation and/or competition. We show on the basis of three long-term trawl surveys that abundance of small fish (all species) as well as abundance of demersal species with a low maximum length (Lmax) have steadily and significantly increased in absolute numbers over large parts of the North Sea during the last 30 years. Taking average fishing mortality of assessed commercial species as an index of exploitation rate of the fish community, it appears that fishing effort reached its maximum in the mid-1980s and has declined slightly since. If the observed changes in the community are caused by indirect effects of fishing, there must be a considerable delay in response time, because the observed changes generally proceed up to recent years, although both size and Lmax spectra suggest some levelling off, or even recovery in one of the surveys. Indeed, significant correlations between all community metrics and exploitation rate were obtained only if time lags ≥6 years were introduced.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Ecology,Aquatic Science,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics,Oceanography

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5. Changes in cod stocks and cod fisheries in the North Sea;Daan;Rapports et Procès-verbaux des Réunions du Conseil International pour l'Exploration de la Mer,1978

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