Overfished species suffer evolutionary damage: report
'Darwinian debt' may be irreversible
Reuters
Friday, November 23, 2007
CREDIT: Jeff J Mitchell/Getty Images
Trends show that the North Seas fish stocks are in decline including cod mackerel, and haddock other fish such as bluefin tuna have disappeared completely.
VIENNA -- Industrial-scale fisheries have not only sapped the world's fish stocks but also changed the species' evolutionary course, exacerbating the effect of overfishing by producing smaller and less fertile fish.
Scientist Ulf Dieckmann also said overfishing and the practice of throwing lower quality fish back into the sea to raise the value of fishing quotas might explain the massive drop in population.
"Human activity had a possibly irreversible evolutionary effect in just a few generations," said Dieckmann, a member of a group of scientists who wrote a comment in the journal Science on managing fish stocks published Thursday.
"We are running up a Darwinian debt that future generations will have to pay back."
Some 15 years ago, cod stocks on the Grand Banks in the northwest Atlantic collapsed, bringing down the fishing industry in the region. The same species is now under threat in the northeast Atlantic off Norway and Russia, he said.
On the Canadian Grand Banks, fish stocks still show little sign of recovery, Dieckmann said.
Looking at fishery data from the past few decades, the scientists found that increased mortality due to overfishing had favoured fish that matured smaller and earlier, yet also carried far fewer eggs at their first reproduction.
Older data showed a typical cod caught in Norway might have taken 10 years to mature, while the same fish now would only take six years or even less, said Dieckmann.
"The question is not whether such evolution will occur, but how fast fishing practices bring about evolutionary changes and what the consequences will be," the group wrote in Science.
Dieckmann expected that a change coming about in 40 years might take up to 250 years to reverse -- if it happened at all.
"Upsetting the dynamics of predators and prey may cause other changes that block this," he said.
Assessing the evolutionary impact could become an essential tool in managing fish stocks, said Dieckmann.
Fishing policy makers could've helped avoid the collapse of Atlantic cod stocks by taking into account the fishing industry's impact on evolution in the oceans.
Dieckmann said recommendations based on the research include: less fishing overall, avoiding catching small fish by using wider-meshed nets and banning fishing in areas where fish spawn.
"Based on data that were available seven to 10 years before the collapse of the Grand Banks cod fisheries, an evolutionary impact assessment could have been used to send an early warning signal to policy makers," said Dieckmann.
"(Such assessments) applied now can thus help us avoid future catastrophes unfolding elsewhere."
© The Vancouver Sun 2007