4.5 Article

Impacts of invasive fish removal through angling on population characteristics and juvenile growth rate

期刊

ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION
卷 5, 期 11, 页码 2193-2202

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ece3.1471

关键词

Biological invasions; invasive species management; Lepomis gibbosus; nonrandom selection; recreational angling

资金

  1. Fisheries Society of the British Isles (FSBI)
  2. ERG Marie Curie grant [PERG08-GA-2010-276969]
  3. ONEMA (Projet ISOLAC - Convention) [13-V5-28]
  4. French Laboratory of Excellence project TULIP [ANR-10-LABX-41, ANR-11-IDEX-0002-02]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Exploitation can modify the characteristics of fish populations through the selective harvesting of individuals, with this potentially leading to rapid ecological and evolutionary changes. Despite the well-known effects of invasive fishes on aquatic ecosystems generally, the potential effects of their selective removal through angling, a strategy commonly used to manage invasive fish, are poorly understood. The aim of this field-based study was to use the North American pumpkinseed Lepomis gibbosus as the model species to investigate the consequences of selective removal on their population characteristics and juvenile growth rates across 10 populations in artificial lakes in southern France. We found that the maximal individual mass in populations decreased as removal pressure through angling increased, whereas we did not observed any changes in the maximal individual length in populations as removal pressure increased. Total population abundance did not decrease as removal pressure increased; instead, here was a U-shaped relationship between removal pressure and the abundance of medium-bodied individuals. In addition, population biomass had a U-shaped curve response to removal pressure, implying that invasive fish populations can modulate their characteristics to compensate for the negative effects of selective removals. In addition, individual lengths at age 2 and juvenile growth rates decreased as removal pressure through angling increased, suggesting a shift toward an earlier size at maturity and an overall slower growing phenotype. Therefore, these outputs challenge the efficiency of selective management methods, suggesting the use of more proactive strategies to control invasive populations, and the need to investigate the potential ecological and evolutionary repercussions of nonrandom removal.

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