In the light of life histories, bet-hedging, and fisheries-induced change : case Atlantic cod (Gadus morhua)
Year of publication
2023
Authors
Hočevar, Sara
Abstract
Nature is full of complex phenomena, non-linearity, random chances, and less random changes. These conditions promote diversity among and within species, in their life histories and ecological roles. In this thesis, I untangled some of the evolutionary and ecological advantages that the life history diversity of the iconic Atlantic cod, Gadus morhua, generates and maintains at different levels of biological organisation. I explored the eco-evolutionary dynamics by applying the mechanistic models to empirical systems; one parameterized for Atlantic cod, and another for a newly built Skagerrak food web. Analyses of fitness components revealed that multiple-batch spawning is a risk-spreading strategy of cod, an adaptation to hedge its evolutionary bets when the environmental conditions impacting the survival of egg batches are uncertain and destructive. Because multiple-batch spawning is a size-related trait, the size-selective fishing was found to cause a lingering eco-evolutionary change, not only by selective removal of bigger and older individuals, but also by an unforeseen removal of individuals with the greatest risk-spreading potential. These findings reveal that the risk-spreading benefits multiple-batch spawning provides, are not advantageous under size-selective fishing, considering it does not protect the fitness nor demographic structure of Atlantic cod. I have tackled the role of the co-existing Fjord cod and North Sea cod ecotypes for the food web topology and functioning in a coastal pelagic food web of Skagerrak and found that the intraspecific differences in life-history traits and ontogenetic dietary shifts between the ecotypes led to counterintuitive opposing impact on the fish community. Skagerrak food web proved less robust to the loss of a smaller stationary Fjord cod ecotype, of which absence induced a decline in the biomass of several economically valuable harvested species. Diversity was a silver lining of the four papers, all cautioning about the causes and consequences of fisheries-induced changes that reduce such diversity at any of the three levels: individual, populational, food web.
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Publication type
Publication format
Monograph
Audience
Scientific
MINEDU's publication type classification code
G5 Doctoral dissertation (articles)
Publication channel information
Open access
Open access in the publisher’s service
Yes
Open access of publication channel
Fully open publication channel
Self-archived
No
Other information
Fields of science
Ecology, evolutionary biology; Biochemistry, cell and molecular biology; Plant biology, microbiology, virology
Keywords
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Publication country
Finland
Internationality of the publisher
Domestic
Language
English
International co-publication
No
Co-publication with a company
No
The publication is included in the Ministry of Education and Culture’s Publication data collection
Yes