Title of article :
Changes in the northern Gulf of St. Lawrence ecosystem estimated by inverse modelling: Evidence of a fishery-induced regime shift?
Author/Authors :
Claude Savenkoff، نويسنده , , Martin Castonguay، نويسنده , , Denis Chabot، نويسنده , , Mike O. Hammill، نويسنده , , Hugo Bourdages، نويسنده , , Lyne Morissette، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2007
Abstract :
Mass-balance models have been constructed using inverse methodology for the northern Gulf of St. Lawrence for the mid-1980s, the mid-
1990s, and the early 2000s to describe ecosystem structure, trophic group interactions, and the effects of fishing and predation on the ecosystem
for each time period. Our analyses indicate that the ecosystem structure shifted dramatically from one previously dominated by demersal (cod,
redfish) and small-bodied forage (e.g., capelin, mackerel, herring, shrimp) species to one now dominated by small-bodied forage species. Overfishing
removed a functional group in the late 1980s, large piscivorous fish (primarily cod and redfish), which has not recovered 14 years after
the cessation of heavy fishing. This has left only marine mammals as top predators during the mid-1990s, and marine mammals and small Greenland
halibut during the early 2000s. Predation by marine mammals on fish increased from the mid-1980s to the early 2000s while predation by
large fish on fish decreased. Capelin and shrimp, the main prey in each period, showed an increase in biomass over the three periods. A switch in
the main predators of capelin from cod to marine mammals occurred, while Greenland halibut progressively replaced cod as shrimp predators.
Overfishing influenced community structure directly through preferential removal of larger-bodied fishes and indirectly through predation
release because larger-bodied fishes exerted top-down control upon other community species or competed with other species for the same
prey. Our modelling estimates showed that a change in predation structure or flows at the top of the trophic system led to changes in predation
at all lower trophic levels in the northern Gulf of St. Lawrence. These changes represent a case of fishery-induced regime shift.
Keywords :
mass-balance models , Inverse methods , cod collapse , Regime shift , Gulf of St. Lawrence (Canada) , food webs
Journal title :
Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science
Journal title :
Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science