For biology professor Dylan Fraser, granted $579,840 over a three-year period, the funding will allow him to assess the degree to which eco-evolutionary changes generated by common harvesting approaches affect fisheries productivity.
As principal investigator on the project, he has put together a multidisciplinary team of individuals from Fisheries and Oceans, Parks Canada Agency, Alberta Environment and Parks, as well as researchers from the University of Calgary and UQAM. With the funding, they will conduct a large -scale experiment across a series of closed, natural trout populations. Through an interdisciplinary approach that combines evolution, ecology and genomics, the research has the potential to generate a breakthrough for the sustainable management and conservation of fisheries.