Abstract
A key assumption in stock assessment and stock forecasts often is that spawning-stock biomass (SSB) and egg production are proportional and that the reproductive potential is independent of stock structure (age composition and sex ratio). Based on a 60-year time-series of total egg production (TEP) of North Sea plaice, we demonstrate that this assumption could result in a biased perception of the temporal trend in reproductive potential. The time-series incorporates: (i) annual observations on maturity, growth, and condition, (ii) a predictive model for interannual variations in fecundity caused by variations in body condition and by the probability of being a recruit spawner, and (iii) a cohort analysis of sex-specific landings-at-age since 1948. Following an increase in fishing mortality rate, TEP declined by a factor of 7–8 from a peak in the 1970s to a minimum in 1999–2000. Concurrent with this decline, the contribution of recruit spawners and the size difference between spawning males and females decreased. The implications of phenotypic plasticity and fisheries-induced evolutionary changes in growth and maturation for the recovery potential of the plaice stock are discussed.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 1931-1938 |
Journal | ICES Journal of Marine Science |
Volume | 67 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 2010 |
Keywords
- cod gadus-morhua
- pleuronectes-platessa l
- maturation reaction norms
- annual egg-production
- atlantic cod
- broadcast spawner
- fecundity
- growth
- size
- age