Size-selective fishing is expected to affect traits such as individual growth rate, but the relationship between the fishery-linked selection differentials and the corresponding phenotypic changes is not well understood. We analysed a 25-year monitoring survey of sympatric populations of the two Alpine whitefish Coregonus albellus and C. fatioi. We determined the fishing-induced selection differentials on growth rates, the actual change of growth rates over time, and potential indicators of reproductive strategies that may change over time. We found marked declines in adult growth rate and significant selection differentials that may partly explain the observed declines. However, when comparing the two sympatric species, the selection diffe...
Despite mounting recognition of the importance of fishing-induced evolution, methods for quantifying...
Despite mounting recognition of the importance of fishing-induced evolution, methods for quantifying...
In many exploited marine fish species, older individuals within cohorts often have slower growth rat...
Size-selective fishing is expected to affect traits such as individual growth rate, but the relation...
Size-selective fishing, environmental changes and reproductive strategies are expected to affect lif...
The interest in fishing-induced life-history evolution has been growing in the last decade, in part ...
The possibility for fishery-induced evolution of life history traits is an important but unresolved ...
Size-selective harvesting in commercial fisheries can induce rapid changes in biological traits. Whi...
Today, fishing is the dominant source of mortality in most commercially exploited fish stocks. Life...
Evolutionary change is occurring within tens of generations or fewer in nature. This contemporary ev...
Commercial fishing utilizes a variety of gears, all of which are selective with respect to at least ...
Fish in many exploited stocks grow faster and mature earlier at either larger or smaller sizes in co...
Increased mortality from fishing is expected to favor faster life histories, realized through earlie...
Methods for quantifying selection pressures on adaptive traits affected by size-selective fishing ar...
Life history traits are important determinants of fish population dynamics and may provide insight a...
Despite mounting recognition of the importance of fishing-induced evolution, methods for quantifying...
Despite mounting recognition of the importance of fishing-induced evolution, methods for quantifying...
In many exploited marine fish species, older individuals within cohorts often have slower growth rat...
Size-selective fishing is expected to affect traits such as individual growth rate, but the relation...
Size-selective fishing, environmental changes and reproductive strategies are expected to affect lif...
The interest in fishing-induced life-history evolution has been growing in the last decade, in part ...
The possibility for fishery-induced evolution of life history traits is an important but unresolved ...
Size-selective harvesting in commercial fisheries can induce rapid changes in biological traits. Whi...
Today, fishing is the dominant source of mortality in most commercially exploited fish stocks. Life...
Evolutionary change is occurring within tens of generations or fewer in nature. This contemporary ev...
Commercial fishing utilizes a variety of gears, all of which are selective with respect to at least ...
Fish in many exploited stocks grow faster and mature earlier at either larger or smaller sizes in co...
Increased mortality from fishing is expected to favor faster life histories, realized through earlie...
Methods for quantifying selection pressures on adaptive traits affected by size-selective fishing ar...
Life history traits are important determinants of fish population dynamics and may provide insight a...
Despite mounting recognition of the importance of fishing-induced evolution, methods for quantifying...
Despite mounting recognition of the importance of fishing-induced evolution, methods for quantifying...
In many exploited marine fish species, older individuals within cohorts often have slower growth rat...