Back to Search Start Over

Urbanisation and Fishing Alter the Body Size and Functional Traits of a Key Fisheries Species

Authors :
Felicity E. Hardcastle
Christopher J. Henderson
Paul S. Maxwell
Thomas A. Schlacher
Rod M. Connolly
Andrew D. Olds
Ben L. Gilby
Tyson R. Jones
Tyson S. H. Martin
Source :
Estuaries and Coasts. 43:2170-2181
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2020.

Abstract

Human pressures on ecosystems from landscape transformation and harvesting can result in changes to body size and functional traits of affected species. However, these effects remain very poorly understood in many settings. Here we examine whether and how fishing and the attributes of coastal seascapes can operate in concert to change the body size and functional traits of the giant mud crab, Scylla serrata; a prized fisheries species. We captured 65 legal sized (> 15 cm carapace width) male giant mud crabs from 13 estuaries in southeast Queensland, Australia. These estuaries span a wide range of fishing and catchment landscape transformation intensity. We made a total of 9000 external morphometric measurements in the study. There was a distinct effect of estuarine landscape context on body size, with the largest individuals captured from systems with bigger inlets and lower extent of intertidal flats. Variation in functional traits was most often associated with variation in fishing pressure and human population size in the catchment. Crabs from areas with less commercial fishing pressure and lower human populations in the catchment had the largest chelipeds. We also found effects of urbanisation (negative correlations), intertidal flats (inconsistent effects) and mangrove extent (positive correlations) on the size of some functional traits. Our results show that human pressures can have sublethal effects on animals in estuaries that alter body size and functional traits. These phenotypic responses might have consequences for the fitness and ecological roles of targeted species, and the yields of fisheries catches.

Details

ISSN :
15592731 and 15592723
Volume :
43
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Estuaries and Coasts
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........1ee42d4530c5681598e76bd528551012
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s12237-020-00753-w