Feeding and growth of Atlantic cod (Gadus morhua L.) in the eastern Baltic Sea under environmental change

Author:

Neuenfeldt Stefan1ORCID,Bartolino Valerio2,Orio Alessandro2ORCID,Andersen Ken H1,Andersen Niels G1,Niiranen Susa3,Bergström Ulf4,Ustups Didzis5,Kulatska Nataliia2,Casini Michele2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. National Institute of Aquatic Resources, Technical University of Denmark, 2800 Kongens Lyngby, Denmark

2. Department of Aquatic Resources, Institute of Marine Research, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Turistgatan 5, Lysekil 45330, Sweden

3. Stockholm Resilience Centre, Stockholm University, Kräftriket 2B, Stockholm 10691, Sweden

4. Department of Aquatic Resources, Institute of Coastal Research, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Skolgatan 6, Öregrund 74242, Sweden

5. Fish Resources Research Department, Institute of Food Safety, Animal Health and Environment, Daugavgrivas 8, Riga 1048, Latvia

Abstract

AbstractFive decades of stomach content data allowed insight into the development of consumption, diet composition, and resulting somatic growth of Gadus morhua (Atlantic cod) in the eastern Baltic Sea. We show a recent reversal in feeding level over body length. Present feeding levels of small cod indicate severe growth limitation and increased starvation-related mortality. For young cod, the low growth rate and the high mortality rate are manifested through a reduction in size-at-age. The low feeding levels are likely the result of a decrease in benthic prey abundance due to increased hypoxic areas, while decreasing abundances of pelagic species in the area of cod distribution have prevented a compensatory shift in diet. Our study emphasizes that environmental forcing and the decline in pelagic prey caused changes in consumption and growth rates of small cod. The food reduction is amplified by stunted growth leading to high densities of cod of smaller size competing for the scarce resources. The average growth rate is negative, and only individuals with feeding levels well above average will survive, though growing slowly. These results suggest that the relation between consumption rate, somatic growth and predatorprey population densities is strongly environmentally mediated.

Funder

European Union, Innovation Fund Denmark, Swedish Research Council Formas

Latvian Academy of Science

Co-creating ecosystem-based fisheries management solutions

Formas

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

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

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