McIntyre Peter B, Reidy Liermann Catherine A, Revenga Carmen
Center for Limnology, University of Wisconsin, Madison, WI 53706;
Center for Limnology, University of Wisconsin, Madison, WI 53706.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2016 Nov 8;113(45):12880-12885. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1521540113. Epub 2016 Oct 24.
Fisheries are an essential ecosystem service, but catches from freshwaters are often overlooked. Hundreds of millions of people around the world benefit from low-cost protein, recreation, and commerce provided by freshwater fisheries, particularly in regions where alternative sources of nutrition and employment are scarce. Here, we derive a gridded global map of riverine fisheries and assess its implications for biodiversity conservation, fishery sustainability, and food security. Catches increase with river discharge and human population density, and 90% of global catch comes from river basins with above-average stress levels. Fish richness and catches are positively but not causally correlated, revealing that fishing pressure is most intense in rivers where potential impacts on biodiversity are highest. Merging our catch analysis with nutritional and socioeconomic data, we find that freshwater fisheries provide the equivalent of all dietary animal protein for 158 million people. Poor and undernourished populations are particularly reliant on inland fisheries compared with marine or aquaculture sources. The spatial coincidence of productive freshwater fisheries and low food security highlights the critical role of rivers and lakes in providing locally sourced, low-cost protein. At the same time, intensive fishing in regions where rivers are already degraded by other stressors may undermine efforts to conserve biodiversity. This syndrome of poverty, nutritional deficiency, fishery dependence, and extrinsic threats to biodiverse river ecosystems underscores the high stakes for improving fishery management. Our enhanced spatial data on estimated catches can facilitate the inclusion of inland fisheries in environmental planning to protect both food security and species diversity.
渔业是一项重要的生态系统服务,但淡水捕捞量常常被忽视。全球数亿人受益于淡水渔业提供的低成本蛋白质、娱乐和商业活动,特别是在营养和就业替代来源稀缺的地区。在此,我们绘制了一幅网格化的全球河流渔业地图,并评估其对生物多样性保护、渔业可持续性和粮食安全的影响。捕捞量随河流流量和人口密度增加,全球90%的捕捞量来自压力水平高于平均水平的流域。鱼类丰富度与捕捞量呈正相关,但并非因果关系,这表明在对生物多样性潜在影响最大的河流中,捕捞压力最为强烈。将我们的捕捞量分析与营养和社会经济数据相结合,我们发现淡水渔业为1.58亿人提供了相当于所有膳食动物蛋白的量。与海洋或水产养殖来源相比,贫困和营养不良人口尤其依赖内陆渔业。高产淡水渔业与低粮食安全的空间重合凸显了河流和湖泊在提供本地来源的低成本蛋白质方面的关键作用。与此同时,在河流已经受到其他压力源退化的地区进行密集捕捞可能会破坏生物多样性保护的努力。这种贫困、营养缺乏、渔业依赖以及对生物多样的河流生态系统的外部威胁的综合症突显了改善渔业管理的高风险。我们关于估计捕捞量的增强空间数据可以促进将内陆渔业纳入环境规划,以保护粮食安全和物种多样性。