24 Jul
2007

Using advanced mathematical modeling, scientists from Sweden and The Netherlands show in an article in the recent issue of the American Naturalist that this statement is sometimes true. Sometimes though, killing even a few individuals can have dramatic consequences, causing populations to fluctuate wildly. The important question is: who gets killed" The effects of killing individuals crucially depend on the size of the victims, says Tobias van Kooten, assistant professor at Ume University in Sweden. The regulation of populations is commonly determined by the properties of one specific size class of individuals. In some species, this crucial stage consists of small individuals that can monopolize the available food, denying it to all other individuals.Alternatively, particularly in fish populations, large individuals can limit the abundance of smaller individuals through cannibalism. It is when such a crucial size class is the target of mortality that unexpected things may happen. Van Kooten and co-workers predict for example that in harvested cannibalistic fish populations, individuals may reach giant sizes, more than double the size of those in unharvested population. Indeed, such giant cannibals seem to occur frequently in heavily fished lakes. Our results are directly applicable to conservation and management, since almost all human-induced mortality is size-selective, van Kooten states. Fishermen select gear to catch large fish, while deer hunters prefer the tender meat of calves. Unexpected effects of mortality have been reported before, but this systematic study, would be published in The American Naturalist, unravels the mechanisms behind the effects. Such deep understanding makes it possible to predict effects of size-dependent mortality for a wide range of species........