Maturation shifts in a temperate marine fish population cannot be explained by simulated changes in temperature-dependent growth and maturity

Peter J. Wright*, Stephen C. F. Palmer, C. Tara Marshall

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

5 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

To disentangle genetic and environmental influences on phenotypic traits that influence maturation of fish, it would be useful to predict the expected change due to environment alone to compare with observations. This requires a realistically scaled, species-specific life history model of environmentally determined variation in individual growth and maturation. In this study, inter-annual variability in the proportion of mature haddock in the west North Sea was predicted using a stochastic, individual-based simulation model incorporating a temperature-dependent maturation threshold. This species and region are particularly relevant to the debate about the relative importance of genetic and climate change because North Sea haddock have experienced both high fishing mortality and substantial warming in recent decades. Using observed temperatures in combination with temperature-dependent models for growth and maturation, the simulation model predicted year-to-year variation in length and maturity at age expected for cohorts produced from 1979 to 2006. The simulated proportions mature at age 2 were then compared to the observed proportions in an annual bottom trawl survey. Although the model explained much of the high-frequency variation in maturation, the simulated time trend under-represented the rate of increase in the observed trend in proportions mature. This inability of the temperature-dependent life history model to predict the magnitude of change appears consistent with a long-term decline in the maturation threshold. This result provides indirect support for a genetic change in a key life history trait.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)2781-2790
Number of pages10
JournalMarine Biology
Volume161
Issue number12
Early online date1 Oct 2014
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Dec 2014

Bibliographical note

Acknowledgments We gratefully acknowledge advice from Justin Travis in the development of the model and funding from the Scottish Government Grant SU002. Myron Peck and two anonymous reviewers provided valuable comments on an earlier version of this manuscript.

Keywords

  • haddock melanogrammus-aeglefinus
  • salmon salmo-salar
  • probabilistic reaction norms
  • fisheries-induced evolution
  • life-history variation
  • Atlantic salmon
  • North-Sea
  • sexual-maturation
  • gadus-morhua
  • shelf seas

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