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Seamounts:
Biodiversity and Fisheries
Vulnerability of Seamount Fish to
Fishing: Fuzzy analysis of life history attributes
Telmo Morato, William W. L.Cheung and Tony J. Pitcher
UBC Fisheries Centre
Abstract
Based on life history and ecological characteristics, several authors
have placed seamount fishes at the extreme end of the vulnerability
spectrum. However, it was still unclear if there is justification for
the generalization that seamount fishes overall possess specific life-history
characteristics that render them more vulnerable to fishing than other
species. In this contribution, we test the hypothesis that seamount
fishes generally have a high vulnerability to fishing, and that this
is correlated with their life-history characteristics. Despite rather
broad definitions, our global analysis shows that seamount fishes, particularly
seamount-aggregating fishes, have higher intrinsic vulnerability than
other groups of marine fishes. The pattern is similar when we considered
only commercially exploited species. Biological characteristics leading
to greater vulnerability of seamount fishes include a long lifespan,
late sexual maturation, slow growth and low natural mortality. In light
of our research, this experience supports that seamount fishes, especially
those that aggregate on seamounts, are highly vulnerable to exploitation
and that fishing on seamount will tend to be unsustainable, given current
levels of exploitation and current fishing methods. A number of seamount
populations have already been depleted. More will be depleted and some
will go extinct if fishing on seamounts continues at current, or even
more moderate levels.
Full
text (PDF)
Appendix: Additions
to Froese and Sampangs checklist of seamount fishes
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