Community Ecology Processes, Models, and Applications

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more profitable for fishers to target other species,
which provides the overfished species with a refuge
and allows them to recover. This explanation is
consistent with the negative relationship between
fished taxa richness and interannual variation in
catch (Wormet al. 2006, see also Fig. 8.5).


8.4.2.3 Mechanisms

What is the mechanism for these putative effects
of biodiversity on ecosystem resilience? One likely
candidate is functional compensation (or functional
‘redundancy’) among species within a guild or
functional group, such that decline of one species
is compensated by increase in another species with
similar functional characteristics, e.g. through
relaxed competition. Evidence potentially consis-
tent with this mechanism comes from the tropical


Atlantic, where longline fisheries for billfish show a
pattern of sequential depletion of species (Myers
and Worm 2003), with decline of blue marlin in
the 1960s accompanied by a rise in catch of sailfish,
which then declined in turn as swordfish catches
increased through the late 1970s and 1980s. The
result was that total billfish catch remained relative-
ly stable through time despite boom and bust pat-
terns in the catch of individual species. Similar
patterns have been observed in demersal ecosys-
tems, using both catch data (Myers and Worm
2003) and fisheries-independent data (Shackell
and Frank 2007), in which declines of targeted fish
species were accompanied by compensatory
increases in other groups. These patterns of species
turnover are very similar to that predicted by
theory when a consumer imposes mortality on

100 80
80
60
40
20
0

40
30
20

Per cent recovery Fished taxa richness

Average catch (Gg / yr)

Productivity in catch (%)

Coefficient of variation

Collapsed taxa (%)

10

12 34

0
–10

1234

70
60
50
40
30
20
10
0

150
120
90
60
30
0
12

0.9^3500
0.8
0.7
0.6
0.5
0.4
0.3
0 50 100 150
Fished taxa richness Fished taxa richness

(log) Species richness

r= 0.48
p= 0.0001

r= –0.57
p< 0.0001

r= 0.57
p< 0.0001

r= 0.57
p< 0.0001

r= 0.73
pr= 0.0291= –0.30 p< 0.0001

(log) Species richness

(a) (b)

(c) (d)

(e) (f)

(log) Species richness

200

3000
2500
2000
1500
1000
500
0
0 50 100 150 200

34

123
(log) Species richness

4

Figure 8.6Correlations between biodiversity (fish species richness) and the productivity and resilience of fishery catches
across 64 large marine ecosystems. Reproduced with permission from Wormet al. (2006).


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