Allee effects and the Allee-effect zone in northwest Atlantic cod release_vsrcqfwhmbe2lmt63qu25ypbfq

by Tommi Perälä, Jeffrey A. Hutchings, Anna Kuparinen

Published in Biology Letters by The Royal Society.

2022   Volume 18, Issue 2, p20210439

Abstract

According to the theory of compensatory dynamics, depleted populations should recover when the threat responsible for their decline is removed because <jats:italic>per capita</jats:italic> population growth is assumed to be highest when populations are at their smallest viable sizes. Yet, many seriously depleted fish populations have failed to recover despite threat mitigation. Atlantic cod ( <jats:italic>Gadus morhua</jats:italic> ) stocks off Newfoundland, despite 30 years of dramatically reduced fishing mortality and numerous fishery closures, have not recovered, suggesting that drivers other than fishing can regulate the growth of collapsed fish populations, inhibiting or preventing their recovery. Here, using Bayesian inference, we show strong evidence of Allee effects in a south Newfoundland cod population, based on data on recruitment and spawning stock biomass. We infer the Allee-effect threshold, below which recovery is impaired. We demonstrate the necessity of data at low population sizes to make inferences about the nature of low-abundance dynamics. Our work indicates that Allee effects are not negligible in commercially exploited fish populations, as commonly projected, and that they represent an inhibitory force that can effectively prevent recovery from overfishing. Our findings contrast with prevailing fisheries management practices that assume compensatory dynamics at low abundances with potential to seriously overestimate the recovery potential of collapsed populations.
In application/xml+jats format

Archived Files and Locations

application/pdf   1.6 MB
file_ku5fhzui4revxd4262zl5aj3zy
jyx.jyu.fi (web)
web.archive.org (webarchive)
Read Archived PDF
Preserved and Accessible
Type  article-journal
Stage   published
Date   2022-02-02
Language   en ?
Container Metadata
Not in DOAJ
In Keepers Registry
ISSN-L:  1744-9561
Work Entity
access all versions, variants, and formats of this works (eg, pre-prints)
Catalog Record
Revision: d61ee8f2-8f5c-4bc5-96f1-b95a57b8c6ae
API URL: JSON