2013
DOI: 10.3354/meps10067
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Theory, consequences and evidence of eroding population spatial structure in harvested marine fishes: a review

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Cited by 117 publications
(113 citation statements)
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References 87 publications
(97 reference statements)
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“…The reduction in both the spatial heterogeneity and spatial distribution of spawning stocks has been suggested to decrease population stability (Hsieh et al 2008, Hsieh et al 2010, Ciannelli et al 2013. In this study, 2 stocks at the northern limit of the species' geographical distribution (EBS pollock and NEA cod) were studied over 3 decades, and both displayed an effect of temperature, albeit inversed.…”
Section: Effects Of the Environment And Geographic Location Of The Stmentioning
confidence: 94%
“…The reduction in both the spatial heterogeneity and spatial distribution of spawning stocks has been suggested to decrease population stability (Hsieh et al 2008, Hsieh et al 2010, Ciannelli et al 2013. In this study, 2 stocks at the northern limit of the species' geographical distribution (EBS pollock and NEA cod) were studied over 3 decades, and both displayed an effect of temperature, albeit inversed.…”
Section: Effects Of the Environment And Geographic Location Of The Stmentioning
confidence: 94%
“…Further, at low population size, a stock may lose spatial and/or genetic diversity through selection of certain population sub-units within metapopulations, which may reduce the buffering capacity of the population in response to environmental fluctuations (Hsieh et al 2010, Planque et al 2010, Ciannelli et al 2013). …”
Section: H7: the Temperature-recruitment Relationship Strengthens Witmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Population spatial structure emerges from a set of processes determining the connectivity and isolation of population subunits over space and time (reviewed by Ciannelli et al 2013). Dispersal of individuals over space will tend to erode genetic structure and synchronize population dynamics, whereas natal homing and small home-ranges will promote genetic differentiation, local adaptation, and demographic independence among subpopulations.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%