Evolutionary and ecological feedbacks of the survival cost of reproduction
Date
2012-04
Authors
Kuparinen, Anna
Hardie, David C.
Hutchings, Jeffrey Alexander
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Abstract
Arguably the most fundamental of trade-offs in life-history evolution is the increase in natural
mortality resulting from sexual maturity and reproduction. Despite its central importance, this
increase in mortality, a survival cost, garners surprisingly little attention in fish and fisheries
modeling studies. We undertook an exploratory analysis to evaluate the consequences of this omission
for life-history projections. To this end, we developed a simulation approach that integrates
quantitative genetics into the ecological dynamics of a fish population and parameterized the model
for Atlantic cod (Gadus morhua, L.). When compared to simulations in which the mortality of immature
and mature individuals is equal, the inclusion of a survival cost results in larger asymptotic body
size, older age at maturity, and larger size at maturity. We also find that measures of population
productivity (spawning stock biomass, recruits-per-spawner) are overestimated if the survival cost
is excluded. This sensitivity of key metrics of population growth rate and reproductive capacity to
the magnitude of the survival cost of reproduction underscores the need to explicitly account for
this trade-off in projections of fish population responses to natural and anthropogenic
environmental change, including fisheries.
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Citation
Kuparinen, Anna, David C. Hardie, and Jeffrey A. Hutchings. 2012. "Evolutionary and ecological feedbacks of the survival cost of reproduction." Evolutionary Applications 5(3): 245-255.