Female American lobster (Homarus americanus) size-at-maturity declined in Canada during the 20th and early 21st centuries

2018 ◽  
Vol 75 (6) ◽  
pp. 908-924 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marthe Larsen Haarr ◽  
Bernard Sainte-Marie ◽  
Michel Comeau ◽  
M. John Tremblay ◽  
Rémy Rochette

Changes in the environment and fishing have been shown to affect life-history characteristics, such as size or age of maturation, in a number of finfish and invertebrates. The American lobster (Homarus americanus) supports Canada’s most valuable fishery and exploitation rates are high. Female size-at-maturity (SM) is an important parameter in management of this species, as it is used in establishing minimum legal size regulations. In this study, we show with historical and recent data that SM of female American lobsters has declined across most of Canada, in some areas by as much as 30%, over the past 10–80 years. The spatial patterns of these declines are inconsistent with patterns of rising ocean temperature and lobster abundance (density). They are, however, strongly correlated to the strength of size-based fishery selection, and egg-per-recruit modeling indicates a gain in lifetime egg production associated with observed SM declines under a range of realistic harvesting scenarios. These findings suggest that the marked decrease we document in SM of female American lobsters in Canada over the past century represents an evolutionary response to intense exploitation.

2001 ◽  
Vol 52 (8) ◽  
pp. 1283 ◽  
Author(s):  
Donald F. Landers Jr ◽  
Milan Keser ◽  
Saul B. Saila

Population theory predicts that, under conditions of high age/size-specific mortality rates, individuals in highly exploited populations increase their fitness by decreasing size at sexual maturity, relative to less exploited populations. The benefit of early reproductive maturation is that individuals have a higher probability of surviving to maturity and contributing progeny to maintain the population. Empirical evidence, based on morphometric data from nearly 60 000 female lobsters collected since 1981, suggests that size at sexual maturity of female lobsters in Long Island Sound (USA) has recently decreased. Our findings were supported by decreases in average size and increases in abundance of egg-bearing females over the past two decades. Changes in female size at maturity and subsequent higher egg production may also help to explain the recent increase in lobster recruitment and landings. It is unclear whether these changes were caused by density-dependent factors related to the high exploitation of the species, by natural environmental factors (e.g. higher seawater temperatures), or a combination of the two.


Author(s):  
Jesica D Waller ◽  
Kathleen M Reardon ◽  
Sarah E Caron ◽  
Blaise P Jenner ◽  
Erin L Summers ◽  
...  

Abstract The carapace length (CL) at which American lobster (Homarus americanus) females reach maturity can be used to evaluate egg production, growth patterns, and the overall health of lobster stocks. The female maturity datasets used to represent Gulf of Maine (GOM) lobsters in the 2015 Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission American Lobster Stock Assessment were collected in the 1990s by the Maine Department of Marine Resources at two coastal sites. Many studies have demonstrated an inverse relationship between temperature and the size at maturity in female lobsters, and GOM waters have warmed significantly over this period. To update these GOM maturity datasets, we used ovarian staging to determine the maturity status of over 1200 females from fives sites over 3 years. Broad application of this methodology in tandem with key growth measurements on females 50–120 mm CL allowed us to characterize reproductive development and generate maturity ogives (proportion mature at a given CL). We observed a latitudinal gradient in the size at maturity across this coastal region of the GOM and quantified a decrease in this size over 25 years. These findings have implications for future stock assessment approaches and management measures implemented to sustain this valuable fishery.


1983 ◽  
Vol 40 (11) ◽  
pp. 1958-1967 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Campbell ◽  
D. G. Robinson

New information on female size at maturity, fecundity, and relative egg production per recruit is presented for American lobsters (Homarus americanus) from three areas in the Canadian Maritimes. Based on pleopod examination, sizes at 50% maturity for females were estimated at 108.1 mm carapace length (CL) from the Fundy area (Bay of Fundy and southwestern Nova Scotia), at 92.5 mm CL from eastern Nova Scotia, and at 78.5 mm CL from Northumberland Strait. There was a curvilinear relationship between the number of eggs per female and CL. An egg-per-recruit model predicted that in all three areas the second and third molt groups beyond the legal minimum recruit size contribute the most to egg production under current exploitation rates. Lobsters in Northumberland Strait and eastern Nova Scotia produce up to 30–50% of their eggs at sizes smaller than those at which females from the Bay of Fundy start to produce eggs. Although the stock–recruitment relationships for H. americanus are unknown, the egg-per-recruit assessment suggests that all three areas would benefit in egg production increases by increasing minimum legal recruit size by one molt increment.


1986 ◽  
Vol 43 (11) ◽  
pp. 2072-2084 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. P. Ennis

A review of the literature pertaining to stock definition, causes of variability in recruitment to standing stocks, and larval recruitment processes in the American lobster, Homarus americanus, is presented. Several stocks can be identified but their boundaries are indistinct. The areas are too large for consideration of any of the stocks as a single management unit. The bulk of annual landings is composed of recruitment to standing stocks since the preceding fishing season. Landings for all areas fluctuate and there is considerable variability in patterns of fluctuations between areas. Suggested causes of variability in recruitment include variation in temperature, variation in annual river discharge, fishery induced variability in egg production, man-made interruption in larval supply, and ecosystem change. Mechanisms that determine where larvae that originate in a given area eventually settle are uncertain. Literature on larval recruitment processes contains theories based on passive transport of larvae by surface currents and others based on interacting behavioral and hydrographic mechanisms that may enable larvae to maintain position near parental grounds.


Author(s):  
M. John Tremblay

The distribution of large epibenthic invertebrates (lobster and crabs, bivalve molluscs and echinoderms) in the Bras d’Or Lakes is reviewed, and possible limiting factors are identified. The review is based on published and unpublished studies, including recent trawl surveys directed at fish, and trapping studies directed at American lobster Homarus americanus and green crab Carcinus maenas. The reduced salinities within the Lakes probably limit the distribution of several species (rock crab Cancer irroratus, sea scallop Placopecten magellanicus and possibly American lobster), particularly during the more sensitive larval period. Lobsters and eastern oysters Crassostrea virginica serve to illustrate the multiple factors limiting epibenthic invertebrate distribution within the Bras d’Or Lakes. Lobsters are less abundant within the Bras d’Or Lakes than on the outer coast of Cape Breton Island. Possible reasons are the reduced salinity and limited cobble bottom substrate in the Bras d’Or Lakes, coupled with low food availability and low egg production. Low egg production may be the result of overfishing of lobsters in the past. The life history and physiology of the eastern oyster appears to be well suited to the areas of the Lakes with warm summer temperatures. The oyster populations in the Bras d’Or Lakes are limited by natural predators (e.g. starfish and green crab), competitors (e.g. blue mussel Mytilus edulis and M. trossulus), and overfishing. The green crab, a new arrival to the Bras d’Or Lakes, will likely have negative effects on bivalves such as oysters, but the overall effect of green crab on the Bras d’Or Lakes food web is difficult to predict. Recent trawl surveys indicate both sea urchins Strongylocentrotus droebachiensis and starfish are present in considerable abundance, but little is known about their ecological roles in the Bras d’Or Lakes.La distribution des grands invertébrés épibenthique (les homards et les crabes, les mollusques bivalves et les échinodermes) dans les lacs du Bras d’Or est examinée et les coefficients possiblement limitatifs sont identifies. La revue est basée sur des études publiées et non-publiées englobant les plus récentesétudes sur la pêche au chalut dirigées vers les poissons et les études sur la pêche aux casiers dirigées vers les homards américains Homarus americanus et les crabes verts Carcinus maenas. Salinités réduites dans les lacs du Bras d’Or limitent probablement la distribution de quelques espèces crabes roches Cancer irroratus, pétoncle géant Placopecten magellanicus et possiblement le homard américain, en particulier, pendent l’époque sensible du larvaire. Les homards et les huîtres de l’Est Crossostrea virginica montrent plusieurs facteurs coefficients limitatifs de la distribution des invertébrés épibenthique dan les lacs du Bras d’Or. Les homards sont moins abondants ici que sur la côte extérieure de L’Ille du Cap Breton. Des explications possibles sont la réduction de l’eau saline du pavé rond limite dans le substratum de lacs, ainsi que la pauvre disponibilité de mangé et la production basse des oeufs. Cette dernière est peut-être le résultat d’un trop grand prise de homards au passè. L’histoire et la physiologie des huîtres semblent être bien adaptés aux lieux des lacs de Bras d’Or, qui ont des temperatures chaudes dan l’été. La population des huîtres dans les lacs est limitée par des proies natures ( ie étoiles de mer et les crabes verts) compétiteurs ( ie. Moules bleus Mytilus edulis et M. trossulus) et une trop grande prise de poissons. Le crabe vert, une arrivée nouvelle dans les lacs du Bras d’Or va sans doute avoir des impacts négatifs sur les bivalues comme les huîtres, mais leurs impacts en general sur la chaîne nutritive est difficile à prédire. Les études les plus recents sur la pêche au chalut montrent qu’il y a ungrand nombre d’oursins de mer Strongylocentrotus droebachiensis et des étoiles de mer, mais on ne connait pas quel est leur rôle écologique dans les lacs du Bras d’Or.


1997 ◽  
Vol 48 (8) ◽  
pp. 1029 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. P. Ennis ◽  
M. J. Fogarty

A 21-year series of annual estimates of egg production and recruitment in a Newfoundland lobster population indicates similar asymptotic relationships for recruitment to the fishery and to the adult population, both derived from legal stock estimates. Lines with slopes equal to the 90th-percentile and median survival ratios drawn through the origin of the egg production–adult recruitment scatterplot were examined as potential recruitment overfishing reference points for the Arnold’s Cove lobster stock. If the inverse of the estimated lifetime egg production per recruit (E/R) for a given exploitation rate exceeds the slope of the selected reference point, the risk of recruitment overfishing is high. For the Arnold’s Cove stock, the E/R level at a nominal 90% exploitation rate is estimated at 4.2% of the unfished population, compared with 2.5% for the overfishing reference point corresponding to the median survival ratio. Female lobsters at Arnold’s Cove mature at sizes below the minimum legal size, providing a buffer against high exploitation rates. Small, scattered refugia of large lobsters could also help to explain how heavily exploited populations of this species persist at such a low level of egg production.


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