Cover Image: April 2006 Scientific American Magazine See Inside

Survival of the Smallest [Preview]

Returning the big ones to keep fisheries healthy















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Any commercial fisher or weekend angler knows to "throw the little ones back." The idea is to give small fish time to grow up and make babies. But that strategy may actually be harming fish stocks.

Ongoing experiments on captive fish reveal that harvesting only the largest individuals can actually force a species to evolve undesirable characteristics that diminish an overfished stock's ability to recover, says David O. Conover, director of the Marine Sciences Research Center at Stony Brook University. The results may explain why many of the world's most depleted stocks do not rebound as quickly as expected.


This article was originally published with the title Survival of the Smallest.



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