Effects of adaptive harvesting on fishing down processes and resilience changes in predator-prey and tritrophic systems

Eric Tromeur, Nicolas Loeuille
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Abstract

Many world fisheries display a declining mean trophic level of catches. This “fishing down the food web” is often attributed to reduced densities of high-trophic-level species. We show here that the fishing down pattern can actually emerge from the adaptive harvesting of two- and three-species food webs, where changes in fishing patterns are driven by the relative profitabilities of the harvested species. Shifting fishing patterns from a focus on higher trophic levels to a focus on lower trophic levels can yield abrupt changes in the system, strongly impacting species densities. In predator-prey systems, such regime shifts occur when the predator species is highly valuable relative to the prey, and when the top-down control on the prey is strong. Moreover, we find that when the two species are jointly harvested, high adaptation speeds can reduce the resilience of fisheries. Our results therefore suggest that flexibility in harvesting strategies will not necessarily benefit fisheries but may actually harm their sustainability.
适应性捕捞对捕食-食饵和营养系统捕捞过程和恢复力变化的影响
世界上许多渔场的平均营养渔获量都在下降。这种“沿着食物网向下捕捞”通常归因于高营养水平物种密度的降低。我们在这里表明,捕捞模式实际上可以从两种和三种食物网的适应性捕捞中出现,捕捞模式的变化是由捕捞物种的相对利润驱动的。将捕鱼模式从关注高营养水平转向关注低营养水平可能会导致系统发生突变,强烈影响物种密度。在捕食者-猎物系统中,当捕食者物种相对于猎物非常有价值时,当对猎物自上而下的控制很强时,这种状态就会发生变化。此外,我们发现当两种物种共同捕捞时,高适应速度会降低渔业的恢复力。因此,我们的研究结果表明,捕捞策略的灵活性不一定有利于渔业,但实际上可能会损害其可持续性。
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