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Archaeological Evidence of Validity of Fish Populations on Unexploited Reefs as Proxy Targets for Modern Populations
Authors:KEN LONGENECKER  YVONNE L CHAN  ROBERT J TOONEN  DAVID B CARLON  TERRY L HUNT  ALAN M FRIEDLANDER  EDWARD E DEMARTINI
Institution:1. Department of Natural Sciences, Bishop Museum, , Honolulu, HI, 96817 U.S.A.;2. Hawaii Institute of Marine Biology, , Kaneohe, HI 96744 U.S.A.;3. Biology Department, Bowdoin College, , Brunswick, ME 04011 U.S.A.;4. Clark Honors College and Department of Anthropology, University of Oregon, , Eugene, OR 97403 U.S.A.;5. Department of Biology, University of Hawaii at Manoa, , Honolulu, HI 96822 U.S.A.;6. National Marine Fisheries Service, Pacific Islands Fisheries Science Center, Hawaii Research Center, , Aiea, HI 96701 U.S.A.
Abstract:Reef‐fish management and conservation is hindered by a lack of information on fish populations prior to large‐scale contemporary human impacts. As a result, relatively pristine sites are often used as conservation baselines for populations near sites affected by humans. This space‐for‐time approach can only be validated by sampling assemblages through time. We used archaeological remains to evaluate whether the remote, uninhabited Northwestern Hawaiian Islands (NWHI) might provide a reasonable proxy for a lightly exploited baseline in the Main Hawaiian Islands (MHI). We used molecular and morphological techniques to describe the taxonomic and size composition of the scarine parrotfish catches present in 2 archaeological assemblages from the MHI, compared metrics of these catches with modern estimates of reproductive parameters to evaluate whether catches represented by the archaeological material were consistent with sustainable fishing, and evaluated overlap between size structures represented by the archaeological material and modern survey data from the MHI and the NWHI to assess whether a space‐for‐time substitution is reasonable. The parrotfish catches represented by archaeological remains were consistent with sustainable fishing because they were dominated by large, mature individuals whose average size remained stable from prehistoric (AD approximately 1400–1700) through historic (AD 1700–1960) periods. The ancient catches were unlike populations in the MHI today. Overlap between the size structure of ancient MHI catches and modern survey data from the NWHI or the MHI was an order of magnitude greater for the NWHI comparison, a result that supports the validity of using the NWHI parrotfish data as a proxy for the MHI before accelerated, heavy human impacts in modern times. Evidencia Arqueológica de la Validez de Poblaciones de Peces en Arrecifes Sin Explotar como Objetivos de Apoderamiento para Poblaciones Actuales
Keywords:ancient DNA  fisheries exploitation  parrotfishes  Scarinae  shifting baselines  space‐for‐time substitution  zooarchaeology  ADN antiguo  explotació  n pesquera    neas base cambiantes  peces loro  Scarinae  sustitució  n espacio‐por‐tiempo  zooarqueologí  a
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