ミシガンの湖で魚のサイズが縮小していることを確認(Fishes, young and old, are shrinking in Michigan’s inland lakes)

2025-11-05 ミシガン大学

ミシガン大学の研究によると、過去75年間で州内1497の内陸湖に生息する13種の淡水魚の体長が、若魚・老魚ともに縮小していることが判明した。釣魚観察カードなど市民科学データを用いた解析では、125の魚種・年齢組み合わせのうち46が小型化を示し、特に若魚では捕食リスク増大、老魚では繁殖力や生態系維持機能の低下が懸念される。研究チームは、水温上昇など気候変動が代謝や成長期間を短縮させたことが主因と分析。魚の年齢は鱗の「成長輪」から推定され、今後は大学標本館の約350万体の魚標本を活用し長期的変化を追う予定。体サイズ変化は生態系構造や漁業資源管理に影響を及ぼす可能性があり、気候変動が淡水生態系に与える顕著な生物指標とされる。

<関連情報>

長期的かつ地域規模のデータは、75年間にわたる魚類の体長に対するさまざまな気候変数の異なる傾向を明らかにした Long-Term and Regional-Scale Data Reveal Divergent Trends of Different Climate Variables on Fish Body Size Over 75 Years

Peter J. Flood, Kaitlin E. Schiller, Katelyn B. S. King, Andrew D. Runyon, Kevin E. Wehrly, Karen M. Alofs
Global Change Biology  Published: 05 November 2025
DOI:https://doi.org/10.1111/gcb.70584

ミシガンの湖で魚のサイズが縮小していることを確認(Fishes, young and old, are shrinking in Michigan’s inland lakes)

ABSTRACT

Across many ecto- and endothermic organisms, climate change has induced a general shift towards smaller body sizes. Several existing hypotheses (e.g., Temperature Size Rule—TSR, metabolic theory) contribute to our understanding of climate-driven changes in body size. However, empirical support for climate-induced reductions in body size is mixed with some species growing larger under warmer temperatures, and underlying mechanisms are under debate. To address these inconsistencies, we used Bayesian hierarchical modeling to determine if mean length-at-age (proxy for growth) changed from 1945 to 2020 for age classes of 13 freshwater fish species. Then, we used boosted regression trees (BRTs) to disentangle the impacts of climate change on growth from other environmental factors. Hierarchical modeling revealed that 37% of age classes were decreasing in mean length through time (69% were qualitatively decreasing). BRTs demonstrated that growing degree days and mean annual surface water temperature had varying effects on growth. For cold-and cool-water adapted fishes, length-at-age usually increased as a function of degree days but decreased as a function of surface temperature. Warm-water adapted fishes, however, typically decreased in response to both degree days and surface temperature. The direction of change in length-at-age as a function of surface temperature corresponded to the direction of change over time for 62% (8/13) of species. Overall, we found widespread decreases in length, including age classes from all thermal guilds and juveniles (contrary to TSR assumptions). Mixed results in prior literature may result from choosing different variables to represent climate warming and/or not considering age-specific length responses. When specific climate variables and age are considered, climate change effects on body size may be more predictable at large temporal and spatial scales than previously thought. Continued decreases in length for the youngest and oldest fishes could lead to biodiversity loss and diminished ecosystem functions and services.

1900環境一般
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