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Fish reproductive-energy output increases disproportionately with body size

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posted on 2025-07-31, 23:57 authored by DR Barneche, DR Robertson, CR White, DJ Marshall
Body size determines total reproductive-energy output. Most theories assume reproductive output is a fixed proportion of size, with respect to mass, but formal macroecological tests are lacking. Management based on that assumption risks underestimating the contribution of larger mothers to replenishment, hindering sustainable harvesting. We test this assumption in marine fishes with a phylogenetically controlled meta-analysis of the intraspecific mass scaling of reproductive-energy output. We show that larger mothers reproduce disproportionately more than smaller mothers in not only fecundity but also total reproductive energy. Our results reset much of the theory on how reproduction scales with size and suggest that larger mothers contribute disproportionately to population replenishment. Global change and overharvesting cause fish sizes to decline; our results provide quantitative estimates of how these declines affect fisheries and ecosystem-level productivity.

Funding

Centre for Geometric Biology, Monash University

History

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Rights

2017 © The Authors, some rights reserved

Notes

This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from the American Association for the Advancement of Science via the DOI in this record All data, metadata, and R code can be downloaded and cited as “D. R. Barneche, D. R. Robertson, C. R. White, D. J. Marshall, Data and code from: Fish reproductive-energy output increases disproportionately with body size. Zenodo (available at https:// github.com/dbarneche/fishFecundity), doi:10.5281/zenodo.1213118.”

Journal

Science

Publisher

American Association for the Advancement of Science

Version

  • Accepted Manuscript

Language

en

FCD date

2019-03-05T09:22:48Z

FOA date

2019-03-05T09:28:23Z

Citation

Vol. 360 (6389), pp. 642 - 645

Department

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