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  3. Rebuilding fish biomass for the world's marine ecoregions under climate change.
 

Rebuilding fish biomass for the world's marine ecoregions under climate change.

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BORIS DOI
10.48350/172627
Date of Publication
November 2022
Publication Type
Article
Division/Institute

Physikalisches Instit...

Contributor
Cheung, William W L
Palacios-Abrantes, Juliano
Frölicher, Thomasorcid-logo
Physikalisches Institut, Klima- und Umweltphysik (KUP)
Palomares, Maria Lourdes
Clarke, Tayler
Lam, Vicky W Y
Oyinlola, Muhammed A
Pauly, Daniel
Reygondeau, Gabriel
Sumaila, U Rashid
Teh, Lydia C L
Wabnitz, Colette C C
Subject(s)

500 - Science::530 - ...

Series
Global change biology
ISSN or ISBN (if monograph)
1365-2486
Publisher
Wiley
Language
English
Publisher DOI
10.1111/gcb.16368
PubMed ID
36047439
Description
Rebuilding overexploited marine populations is an important step to achieve the United Nations' Sustainable Development Goal 14-Life Below Water. Mitigating major human pressures is required to achieve rebuilding goals. Climate change is one such key pressure, impacting fish and invertebrate populations by changing their biomass and biogeography. Here, combining projection from a dynamic bioclimate envelope model with published estimates of status of exploited populations from a catch-based analysis, we analyze the effects of different global warming and fishing levels on biomass rebuilding for the exploited species in 226 marine ecoregions of the world. Fifty three percent (121) of the marine ecoregions have significant (at 5% level) relationship between biomass and global warming level. Without climate change and under a target fishing mortality rate relative to the level required for maximum sustainable yield of 0.75, we project biomass rebuilding of 1.7-2.7 times (interquartile range) of current (average 2014-2018) levels across marine ecoregions. When global warming level is at 1.5 and 2.6°C, respectively, such biomass rebuilding drops to 1.4-2.0 and 1.1-1.5 times of current levels, with 10% and 25% of the ecoregions showing no biomass rebuilding, respectively. Marine ecoregions where biomass rebuilding is largely impacted by climate change are in West Africa, the Indo-Pacific, the central and south Pacific, and the Eastern Tropical Pacific. Coastal communities in these ecoregions are highly dependent on fisheries for livelihoods and nutrition security. Lowering the targeted fishing level and keeping global warming below 1.5°C are projected to enable more climate-sensitive ecoregions to rebuild biomass. However, our findings also underscore the need to resolve trade-offs between climate-resilient biomass rebuilding and the high near-term demand for seafood to support the well-being of coastal communities across the tropics.
Handle
https://boris-portal.unibe.ch/handle/20.500.12422/87198
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