“…Life-history theory predicts that increased mortality devalues life-history processes occurring later in life, relative to those occurring earlier (e.g., Law, 1979;Stearns, 1992;Ernande et al, 2004). Therefore, systematic reductions in age and size at maturation observed for stocks exposed to heavy fishing (e.g., Jørgensen, 1990;Rijnsdorp, 1993a;Trippel, 1995) are suggestive of fisheries-induced evolution (e.g., Grift et al, 2003Grift et al, , 2007Barot et al, 2004Barot et al, , 2005Olsen et al, 2004Olsen et al, , 2005Baulier et al, 2006;Dieckmann and Heino, 2007;Mollet et al, 2007;Heino andDieckmann, 2008a, 2008b;Thé riault et al, 2008;Arlinghaus et al, 2009;Okamoto et al, 2009). These concerns add to those raised more broadly about the negative impact of fisheries on the ecosystems in which all fish stocks are embedded (e.g., Jennings and Kaiser, 1998).…”