Warming Shrinks Fish Size and Fertility
Fish Shrink Due to Climate Change
Discover.com, July 20, 2009
Fish
have lost half their average body mass and smaller species are making
up a larger proportion of European fish stocks as a result of global
warming, a study has found.
"It's
huge," said study author Martin Daufresne of the Cemagref Public
Agricultural and Environmental Research Institute in Lyon, France.
"Size is a fundamental characteristic that is linked to a number of biological functions, such as fecundity -- the capacity to reproduce."
Smaller fish tend to produce fewer eggs. They also provide less sustenance for predators - including humans - which could have significant implications for the food chain and ecosystem.
A similar shrinking effect was recently documented in Scottish Sheep and Daufresne said it is possible that global warming could have "a significant impact on organisms in general."
Earlier
research has already established that fish have shifted their
geographic ranges and their migratory and breeding patters in response
to rising water temperatures. It has also been established that warmer
regions tend to be inhabited by smaller fish.
Daufresne
and his colleagues examined long-term surveys of fish populations in
rivers, streams and the Baltic and North Seas and also performed
experiments on bacteria and plankton.
They
found the individual species lost an average of 50 percent of their
body mass over the past 20 to 30 years while the average size of the
overall fishing stock had shrunk by 60 percent.
This
was a result of a decrease in the average size-at-age and an increase
in the proportion of juveniles and small-sized species, Daufresne said.
"It
was an effect that we observed in a number of organisms and in a number
of very different environments -- on fish, on plankton, on bacteria, in
fresh water, in salt water -- and we observed a global shrinking of
size for all the organisms in all the environments," Daufresne said in
a telephone interview.
While
commercial and recreational fishing did impact some of the fisheries
studied, it "cannot be considered as the unique trigger" for the
changes in size, the study published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences found. "Although not negating the role of other factors, our study provides strong evidence that temperature actually plays a major role in driving changes in the size structure of populations and communities," the study concluded. |