Regime shifts in exploited marine food webs: detecting mechanisms underlying alternative stable states using size- structured community dynamics theory

Many marine ecosystems have undergone ‘regime shifts’, i.e. abrupt reorgan- izations across trophic levels. Establishing whether these constitute shifts between alternative stable states is of key importance for the prospects of eco- system recovery and for management. We show how mechanisms underly...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences
Main Authors: Gårdmark, A., Casini, M., Huss, M., van Leeuwen, A., Hjelm, J., Persson, L., de Roos, A.M.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2015
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Online Access:https://dare.uva.nl/personal/pure/en/publications/regime-shifts-in-exploited-marine-food-webs-detecting-mechanisms-underlying-alternative-stable-states-using-size-structured-community-dynamics-theory(3fb645fe-022d-4d03-a861-c0bda78b7c98).html
https://doi.org/10.1098/rstb.2013.0262
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Summary:Many marine ecosystems have undergone ‘regime shifts’, i.e. abrupt reorgan- izations across trophic levels. Establishing whether these constitute shifts between alternative stable states is of key importance for the prospects of eco- system recovery and for management. We show how mechanisms underlying alternative stable states caused by predator-prey interactions can be revealed in field data, using analyses guided by theory on size-structured community dynamics. This is done by combining data on individual performance (such as growth and fecundity) with information on population size and prey avail- ability. We use Atlantic cod (Gadus morhua) and their prey in the Baltic Sea as an example to discuss and distinguish two types of mechanisms, ‘cultivation- depensation’ and ‘overcompensation’, that can cause alternative stable states preventing the recovery of overexploited piscivorous fish populations. Impor- tantly, the type of mechanism can be inferred already from changes in the predators’ body growth in different life stages. Our approach can thus be readily applied to monitored stocks of piscivorous fish species, for which this information often can be assembled. Using this tool can help resolve the causes of catastrophic collapses in marine predatory-prey systems and guide fisheries managers on how to successfully restore collapsed piscivorous fish stocks.