School of Aquatic and Fishery Sciences, University of Washington, Seattle, WA 98195;
Conservation Biology Division, Northwest Fisheries Science Center, National Marine Fisheries Service, National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration, Seattle, WA 98112.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2017 Oct 3;114(40):10797-10802. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1702506114. Epub 2017 Sep 18.
Individuals relying on natural resource extraction for their livelihood face high income variability driven by a mix of environmental, biological, management, and economic factors. Key to managing these industries is identifying how regulatory actions and individual behavior affect income variability, financial risk, and, by extension, the economic stability and the sustainable use of natural resources. In commercial fisheries, communities and vessels fishing a greater diversity of species have less revenue variability than those fishing fewer species. However, it is unclear whether these benefits extend to the actions of individual fishers and how year-to-year changes in diversification affect revenue and revenue variability. Here, we evaluate two axes by which fishers in Alaska can diversify fishing activities. We show that, despite increasing specialization over the last 30 years, fishing a set of permits with higher species diversity reduces individual revenue variability, and fishing an additional permit is associated with higher revenue and lower variability. However, increasing species diversity within the constraints of existing permits has a fishery-dependent effect on revenue and is usually (87% probability) associated with increased revenue uncertainty the following year. Our results demonstrate that the most effective option for individuals to decrease revenue variability is to participate in additional or more diverse fisheries. However, this option is expensive, often limited by regulations such as catch share programs, and consequently unavailable to many individuals. With increasing climatic variability, it will be particularly important that individuals relying on natural resources for their livelihood have effective strategies to reduce financial risk.
以自然资源开采为生的个人,其收入的高度可变性受到环境、生物、管理和经济等多种因素的影响。管理这些产业的关键是确定监管行动和个人行为如何影响收入的可变性、财务风险,以及进而影响经济稳定性和自然资源的可持续利用。在商业渔业中,捕捞更多种类的鱼类的社区和船只的收入波动性比捕捞较少种类的鱼类的社区和船只小。然而,目前还不清楚这些好处是否会延伸到个别渔民的行为,以及多样化程度的年际变化如何影响收入和收入的可变性。在这里,我们评估了阿拉斯加渔民可以通过两种方式来使捕鱼活动多样化。我们发现,尽管在过去 30 年里专业化程度有所提高,但捕捞一组具有更高物种多样性的许可证可以降低个人收入的可变性,而增加一张许可证与更高的收入和更低的波动性有关。然而,在现有许可证的限制范围内增加物种多样性对收入有渔业相关的影响,并且通常(87%的概率)与下一年收入不确定性的增加有关。我们的研究结果表明,个人降低收入可变性的最有效选择是参与更多或更多样化的渔业。然而,这种选择代价高昂,通常受到捕捞份额等法规的限制,因此许多人无法选择。随着气候可变性的增加,对于依赖自然资源为生的个人来说,拥有有效的策略来降低财务风险将尤为重要。