Big, old fish key to stocks' survival, OSU experts say, THIS IS A MUST READ! For those interested in preservation of species. Kurt
Date: Wed, 19 Jan 2005 19:08:42 -0800
   
Big, old fish key to stocks' survival, OSU experts say
>From Bend.com news sources
Posted: Tuesday, January 18, 2005 12:36 PM
Reference Code: PR-20624

January 18 - CORVALLIS � Recent studies have found that large, old and 
oily
groundfish are significantly more important than their younger 
counterparts
in maintaining healthy marine fish stocks � the larvae from their eggs
better resist starvation and have a much greater chance of survival.

These same big, old fish are also routinely sought by fisherman, 
scientists
say, and the age decline in fish populations helps to explain the 
collapsing
fisheries off the Pacific Northwest coast.

Other research also indicated that many fish populations up and down 
the
coast are essentially distinct, and fish from one area don�t 
intermingle as
much as had been assumed with fish from elsewhere.

These combined problems might be most effectively addressed with a 
diverse
network of marine protected areas, said scientists at Oregon State
University.

The findings were recently summarized in an article in Fisheries, a
professional journal.

�We�ve known for a long time that bigger fish produce more eggs, that 
we
might need to have numerous smaller females to produce as many eggs as 
one
larger fish,� said Mark Hixon, an OSU professor of zoology. �Modern 
fish
management is based on this assumption. But we�ve also assumed that one 
fish
egg is just as good as another, and the newest studies are showing 
that�s
just not the case.�

New studies by OSU researcher Steven Berkeley, who is now at the 
University
of California�Santa Cruz, have shown that eggs from very old fish have 
much
larger oil globules in their yolk, giving the larvae that develop from 
these
eggs a chance to grow faster and survive starvation longer. Older fish 
also
spawn earlier, which sometimes better coordinates larval birth with 
peak
food availability.

A marine ecosystem routinely has more than 99 percent mortality of fish
larvae due to predation, starvation and fluctuating ocean conditions. 
So
anything that helps young larvae pass through their most vulnerable
lifestyle stages can significantly increase their chance of survival,
scientists say.

�In some cases, it appears that almost all of the surviving larvae have 
come
from large, old, fat fish,� Hixon said. �For effective replenishment of 
our
groundfish stocks, these older fish may be essential. But with the fish
management systems we now have in place, fish of this age range may
represent far less than 5 percent of the total population of a 
species.�

Black rockfish, for instance, can begin to reproduce at about five 
years of
age, but need to be about 12 years old with heavier amounts of fat 
before
they can produce the type of �oily� eggs that may have increased 
survival
chances. Larvae from the oldest fish can survive starvation 2.5 times 
as
long as those of the youngest, and grow three times as fast on the same
diet. Similar findings have been made with other species.

For a fish, surviving to adulthood is not easy. But after that, the 
natural
dangers decline.

In a natural system, old fish actually have an extremely low rate of
mortality compared to their younger counterparts, and a 
disproportionately
higher level of body lipids � they get fat. Young fish are 
comparatively
lean. And fishing pressure works exactly to the opposite of most 
natural
mortality agents.

During a period of intense fishing off the Oregon coast from 1996 to 
1999,
the average age of mature female black rockfish declined from 9.5 to 
6.5
years � in a fish species that has a maximum lifespan of about 50 
years.
Soon after, many fisheries were in serious decline.

Genetic studies by OSU researcher Michael Banks and his graduate 
students
have also shown that there are many unique fishery stocks up and down 
the
coast that do not interbreed, meaning that a collapse of a fishery in 
one
location may not be easily corrected by migrating fish from other 
areas.

There are few easy remedies to this problem, Hixon said.

Complete closure of fishing or extremely low fishing quotas would be 
one
approach, but this has economic repercussions and is often not 
acceptable to
the public, he said. A �catch and release� requirement for large, older 
fish
is not practical for most groundfish species, because their swim 
bladder
often ruptures or other trauma occurs when they are brought to the 
surface,
and they die anyway.

�Given the demand to have a sustainable fishery and the biological
constraints of most marine groundfish species, the option that seems to 
make
the most sense is marine reserves,� Hixon said.

A well-devised network of marine reserves, Berkeley, Hixon and 
colleagues
said in their report, would allow a much higher population of large, 
old
fish within those reserves, a higher level of larvae survival, and 
provide
the ability of reserves to help replenish other marine areas nearby. If
properly located, reserves might also address the distinct nature of
groundfish populations in different geographic locations, they said.

Exactly that type of �seeding� effect has now been documented with some
populations in the Georges Bank off the East Coast, Hixon said, which 
had
huge closures in the mid-1990s due to collapsing fisheries.

�As we come to better understand the biology of these fish populations 
and
what may have led to their dramatic decline, more and more people are
realizing the role that selected reserves could play in addressing some 
of
these problems,� Hixon said. �They offer some benefits that frankly 
cannot
be found with any other management option.�


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