RRC ID 64257
Author Charlotte Evangelista, Leif Asbjørn Vøllestad, Beatriz Diaz Pauli, Eric Edeline
Title Density-dependent consequences of size-selective induced life-history changes to population fitness in medaka (Oryzias latipes)
Journal Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences
Abstract There is an increasing concern about the potential for size-selective harvest to impair population persistence. Yet little is known about the relative contribution of the evolutionary (shifts in life history) and demographic effects (decreased population density and size truncation) of harvesting to changes in fitness. Using medaka (Oryzias latipes), we experimentally investigated the fitness consequences of antagonistic size-dependent selection under contrasted levels of density (low versus high) and size structure (uniform versus truncated). The size-dependent selection generated large- and small-breeder lines with fast growth and late maturity versus slow growth and early maturity life histories, respectively. A decrease in density had a positive effect on almost all fitness components, while size truncation only had a positive effect on fish growth. Small-breeder fish grew slower and had a greater probability of reproducing, at least when considering small-sized females. The number of larvae and juveniles did not differ between the two lines. Finally, the positive effect of decreased density on population asymptotic growth rate was less pronounced in small-breeders than in large-breeders of medaka. These findings stress the importance of considering the ramifications of fishing-adapted life history to population persistence in the light of density-dependent population dynamics.
Volume 77
Pages 1741-1748
Published 2020-10-1
DOI 10.1139/cjfas-2019-0406
IF 2.849
Resource
Medaka Kiyosu (WS1177)