Ecosystem-based management requires the development of indicators that allow anthropogenic impacts to be detected against the background of natural variation. Size-based community metrics are potentially useful indicators because of their theoretical foundation and practical utility. Temporal and spatial patterns in size-based community metrics for Celtic Sea fish are described and calculated using data from the English groundfish survey of the area (1987-2003). The results reveal that the size structure of the community has changed over time, and that a decrease in the relative abundance of larger fish was accompanied by an increase in smaller fish (4-25 g). Temporal analyses of the effects of fishing and climate variation suggest that fis...
1. The development of ecosystem approaches to environmental management implies the need to account f...
Community indicators are used to assess the state of ecological communities and to guide management....
Populations with homogeneous distributions have better bet-hedging capacity than more heterogeneousl...
yFishing alters community size structure by selectively removing larger individual fish and by chang...
Fish community metrics and diversity indices have often been proposed as indicators to support an Ec...
The usefulness and relevance of size-based indicators (SBIs) to an ecosystem approach to fisheries (...
The North Sea is a huge economic resource for millions of people and is undergoing dramatic changes ...
The effects of climate change and fishing pressure on demersal fish communities can be difficult to ...
Size-based community and ecosystem metrics, such as mean body mass and the slopes of size spectra, h...
Global climate change has already caused bottom temperatures of coastal marine ecosystems to increas...
Community metrics describe aspects of community structure and are often calculated from species-size...
The Large Fish Indicator (LFI) is a univariate size-based indicator of fish community state that has...
The Large Fish Indicator (LFI) is a univariate size-based indicator of fish community state that has...
1. Fishing changes the structure of fish communities and the relative impacts of fishing are assesse...
Commercial fishing and climate change have influenced the composition of marine fish assemblages wor...
1. The development of ecosystem approaches to environmental management implies the need to account f...
Community indicators are used to assess the state of ecological communities and to guide management....
Populations with homogeneous distributions have better bet-hedging capacity than more heterogeneousl...
yFishing alters community size structure by selectively removing larger individual fish and by chang...
Fish community metrics and diversity indices have often been proposed as indicators to support an Ec...
The usefulness and relevance of size-based indicators (SBIs) to an ecosystem approach to fisheries (...
The North Sea is a huge economic resource for millions of people and is undergoing dramatic changes ...
The effects of climate change and fishing pressure on demersal fish communities can be difficult to ...
Size-based community and ecosystem metrics, such as mean body mass and the slopes of size spectra, h...
Global climate change has already caused bottom temperatures of coastal marine ecosystems to increas...
Community metrics describe aspects of community structure and are often calculated from species-size...
The Large Fish Indicator (LFI) is a univariate size-based indicator of fish community state that has...
The Large Fish Indicator (LFI) is a univariate size-based indicator of fish community state that has...
1. Fishing changes the structure of fish communities and the relative impacts of fishing are assesse...
Commercial fishing and climate change have influenced the composition of marine fish assemblages wor...
1. The development of ecosystem approaches to environmental management implies the need to account f...
Community indicators are used to assess the state of ecological communities and to guide management....
Populations with homogeneous distributions have better bet-hedging capacity than more heterogeneousl...