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scubacraig.jpg Craig is temporarily a post-doctoral fellow at the Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute who is looking for a permanent position. He spends most of his time balancing his overwhelming geekdom with normalcy so he can function in the real world. Luckily his wife likes his geekiness.



peter_chinchorro.jpg Peter Etnoyer is a Graduate Research Associate at the Harte Research Institute for Gulf of Mexico Studies, Texas A&M University-Corpus Christi. He studies deep corals and ocean fronts, and he loves to be on the water.



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« Ron Jon Should Fund Geologists | Main | Sea-turtle marathon winner »

The Fast Get Faster...the slow get slower

Category: Conservation & EnvironmentNew Research
Posted on: April 25, 2007 3:13 PM, by CR McClain

jackass_mwong.jpg

In the past, I have made the statement on DSN that there can be no such thing as a sustainable deep-sea fishery. My reasons for this are that

  1. Deep-sea fish are slow growing and long lived due to the cold temperatures of deep water. 
  2. This results in low turnover, or replacement, of commercially important, large individuals in the population. In other words, we harvest fishy grandmothers and grandfathers and we have to wait awhile  before a new batch of grandparents comes around.  Hey grandparents just don't grow on trees!
  3. While we could theoretically have a healthy fishery the turnover rates are so low that it could never be commerically viable.

This week in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Science, Thresher and others publish a paper indicating the situation may be more dire. 

The authors looked at 8 exploited marine fish from three different depth groups:

  1. <250m-Banded Morwong, Redfish, Jackass Morwong
  2. 250-1000m-Black Oreo, Spiky Oreo
  3. >1000m-Orange Roughy, Smooth Oreo, Warty Oreo

Using otoliths, fish ear bones, they were able to determine growth rates for 555 individuals. Like tree rings, the thickness of a ring in a otolith indicates growth of the fish for that year. The data tell an interesting story. Shallow-water fish (1) show an increase in growth rate from as early as ~1910 to ~2000. In one species, growth rates of individuals were 28.5% faster than they were just 50 years ago. Mid-depth fish (2) show no change. In contrast, growth rates of deep fish (3) decreased over time as much as 27.9% since the late 1880's.

The authors demonstrate that these long term changes in growth rates reflect the dramatic changes in ocean temperatures occurring in the last century. Because growth rate is physiologically tied to temperature the continued warming of the ocean's surface has quickened growth, while the continued cooling of deep water has slowed growth.

As an aside I really, really wanted to reproduce the fantastic figures from the paper here. But given that one journal has already harassed a fellow Sb'ling over doing the same in an obvious case of fair use practices, I decided to decline. However, head over to PNAS and download the paper for yourself.

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Comments

#1

Duh, best way to have sustainable-whatever is to have human population control system as in Larry Niven's Ringworld...
Just kidding!... or am I?

Posted by: Kiki | April 25, 2007 7:33 PM

#2

You should reproduce the figure. PNAS isn't published by Wiley and I've never heard of them going after someone legally for something like that. It is fair use after all, and I suspect most journals know that. Figures improve the quality of blog scientific discourse. And it's not like your criticizing something they published -- you're giving them good publicity.

Besides, what's the worst that can happen? You get a cease-and-desist letter and take the figure down, like Shelley did (and the publisher gets bad publicity) -- they can't sue you without first sending a C&D and giving you a chance to comply, AFAIK.

Posted by: Ambitwistor | April 26, 2007 7:47 AM

#3

By the way, Wiley has now granted permission for Shelley to reproduce the figure.

Posted by: Ambitwistor | April 26, 2007 10:31 AM

#4

FANTASTIC link and story, guys. I have a new student who's now looking at age and growth in three mesopelagic fishes, one of which is commercially harvested, so this has new relevance.

The paper's findings make sense, although one should be sure to make a difference between those fishes that are strictly mesopelagic and those who are, as Nakamura and Parin describes some of them, "nictoepipelagic." Non-pelagic fishes like roughies who are constrained in their seamount (or other) habitats are inherently constrained in other life-history-strategy ways, too.

Thanks for making my Saturday morning!

Posted by: FishGuyDave | April 28, 2007 4:59 AM

#5

Glad you enjoyed it Dave.

Posted by: CR McClain | April 28, 2007 11:30 AM

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