LECTURE 1:
Evolution of Fish
- Shift in trait for production and maintenance
- Growth rate vs reproduction rate
- Dependent on the existing selective pressure
- Applies to current situations, can very in time
- Example: Mesh nets
- Selects for specific size in fish
- Selection pressure for greater fish size at a younger age/ faster rate
- Increases pressure for smaller fish who pass through these Mesh nets
Hypothesis: Increase in selective pressure of smaller fish over time
- Multiple selective pressure used = fish size increases fitness
- Example: Mesh nets that catcher larger fish = increase survival of smaller fish
- Fisheries: Improve selective pressure of fish size
- Selective pressure for slow growth rate, faster maturation
- Pressure can ‘evolve’ fish populations through fishing
- Commercial and recreational fisheries can be affected
- Size and age of maturity has declined over time
- Fisheries selective pressure for a specific size preference (Commercial and Recreational)
- Resulted in a decrease in abundance for larger size individuals
- Commercial and Recreational Fisheries has impacted natural selection of fish
- Quantitative traits = most effective
- Evolution = decrease harvest amount
LECTURE 2:
Marine Protected Areas (MPA), Sanctuaries and Conservation Reserves
- MPA’s help in species preservation and protection of biodiversity
- No protection = Environmental/ habitat degradation from human intervention
- Large factor of anthropogenic actions such as commercial fisheries
Global Target:
- 1992, Canada and other countries contributed to this
- Goal of conservation of ~10% of marine life by 2020
- Currently, we are at ~3%
- MPA= Mostly USA water
- Protection varies in both micro and macro scale
- Exponential increase with rate of new MPA worldwild
- Continuous effort in increase the amount of MPA’s for conservation efforts
- Canada = 1% of oceans are protected
- Only 0.10% are highly protected
- Protection efforts of 5% by 2017, 10% by 2020 is the goal for Canada
Terrestrial Reserve:
- Includes areas such as National Park
- Areas prohibit buildings, large human intervention (degradation to land)
- ‘Sanctuaries’ are another name or MPA
- Protection usually involves rare or endangered organisms
- Area promotes research!
Success of reserves:
- Look at assess levels of traits within and without reserves
- Usually greater within reserves
- Includes survival and biodiversity of species in these areas
- Success seen in many trophic levels
Mobility challenge:
- MPA’s are hard to do with larger and more mobile species
- Larger and mobile species are ‘non-enclosable’
- Example: Swordfish
- Minimum of 23-30% of Habitat for protection
- Area may be more depending on species
Precautionary Principle:
- Highlight uncertainty and risk
- Stringent management actions taken first and relaxed later
- Later comes with research that demonstrates it is not necessary
- Reverses ‘burden of proof’ to industry or harvest
- Scale of reserve = very large
LECTURE 3:
Sustaining Fish Biodiversity:
Types of Extinction:
- Local Extinction: Species is lost in a certain area it once inhabited. Species can still be found elsewhere
- Ecological Extinction:Reduction of species to the point where individuals can no longer contribute to biological communities
- Biological Extinction: Species is no longer existent on Earth
Extinction rates are 1000 to 10,000x times the rate before humans arrived
- Rate of extinction of all species is 0.1 to 1.0% a year
- Many causes to extinction include the following:
- Habitat loss/ degradation
- Invasive species (introduction of non-native species)
- No natural predators to stop their spread, easier to outcompete local, native species