2012
DOI: 10.1111/j.1755-263x.2012.00295.x
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Transient responses of fished populations to marine reserve establishment

Abstract: Implementation of no-take marine reserves is typically followed by monitoring to ensure that a reserve meets its intended goal, such as increasing the abundance of fished species. The factors affecting whether abundance will increase within a reserve are well characterized; however, those results are based on long-term equilibria of population models. Here we use age-structured models of a generic fish population to analyze the short-term transient response. We show that it may take decades for a fished popula… Show more

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Cited by 74 publications
(191 citation statements)
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References 31 publications
(55 reference statements)
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“…One driver of increased biomass in reserves is larger body sizes for harvested populations (Lester et al 2009), which arise from lower mortality and therefore greater survival to larger sizes, especially if a fishery targets larger individuals (both theoretically expected and empirically verified; see Taylor & McIlwain 2010, White et al 2013. Therefore, both the age and size structure in reserves will fill in with older ages and larger sizes, eventually approaching a stable age and size distribution (White et al 2013).…”
Section: Harvest Selectivitymentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…One driver of increased biomass in reserves is larger body sizes for harvested populations (Lester et al 2009), which arise from lower mortality and therefore greater survival to larger sizes, especially if a fishery targets larger individuals (both theoretically expected and empirically verified; see Taylor & McIlwain 2010, White et al 2013. Therefore, both the age and size structure in reserves will fill in with older ages and larger sizes, eventually approaching a stable age and size distribution (White et al 2013).…”
Section: Harvest Selectivitymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Overall, increases in abundance can arise from both decreased mortality and increased reproductive output as body size increases, whereas increases in biomass can arise from both increased body size and increased abundance. The expected increase in biomass and abundance is greater for higher harvest rates outside the reserves and before reserve establishment (Guénette & Pitcher 1999;White et al 2010bWhite et al , 2013. The timescale of biomass and abundance responses inevitably depends on life history and fishing history (intensity and duration; see Gerber et al 2003, Jennings 2000; see also the sidebar, Long-Term Field Study: A Tropical Example).…”
Section: Wwwannualreviewsorg • Responses To Marine Reserves 51mentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…If eggs had also been harvested, recovery would likely have taken much longer, as has been observed in the Florida green turtle population (Chaloupka et al 2008, NOAA & USFWS 2015. Ultimately, examining changes in juvenile size distributions over time may be a better indicator of population-level changes than sizes of adults, as juvenile size distributions could give an early indication of changes in age structure as cohorts 'fill in' the gaps caused by exploitation (White et al 2013).…”
Section: Temporal Variability Of Demographic Indicatorsmentioning
confidence: 99%