University of Washington, School of Marine and Environmental Affairs, 3707 Brooklyn Ave NE, Seattle, WA 98105, USA.
University of Washington, School of Marine and Environmental Affairs, 3707 Brooklyn Ave NE, Seattle, WA 98105, USA; Arizona State University, School for the Future of Innovation in Society, 1120 South Cady Mall, Tempe, AZ 85287, USA.
Harmful Algae. 2018 Dec;80:35-45. doi: 10.1016/j.hal.2018.09.002. Epub 2018 Sep 27.
In the spring of 2015, a massive harmful algal bloom (HAB) of the toxin-producing diatom Pseudo-nitzschia occurred on the U.S. West Coast, resulting in the largest recorded outbreak of the toxin domoic acid and causing fisheries closures. Closures extended into 2016 and generated an economic shock for coastal fishing communities. This study examines the economic and sociocultural impacts of the Dungeness crab and razor clam fisheries closures on two fishing-dependent communities. Semi-structured interviews were conducted with 36 community members from two communities impacted by the event - Crescent City, California and Long Beach, Washington. Interviewees included those involved in the fishing, hospitality, and retail industries, local government officials, recreational harvesters, and others. Interviews probed aspects of resilience in economic, social, institutional, and physical domains, based on the contention that community resilience will influence the communities' ability to withstand HAB events. Dimensions of vulnerability were also explored, encompassing sensitivity of the communities to HAB events and their adaptive capacity. Common themes that emerged from the interview responses indicate that economic hardships extended beyond fishing-related operations and permeated through other sectors, particularly the hospitality industry. Significant barriers to accessing financial and employment assistance during extended fisheries closures were identified, particularly for fishers. Long-held traditions surrounding crab and shellfish harvest and consumption were disrupted, threatening the cultural identities of the affected communities. Community members expressed a desire for clearer, more thorough, and more rapid dissemination of information regarding the management of fisheries closures and the health risks associated with HAB toxins. The likelihood of intensifying HABs under climate change heightens the need for actions to increase the resilience of fishing communities to the economic and sociocultural impacts caused by HAB-related fisheries closures.
2015 年春季,美国西海岸发生了大规模的产毒硅藻赤潮(HAB),导致了有记录以来最大规模的毒素软骨藻酸爆发,并导致渔业关闭。关闭期一直持续到 2016 年,给沿海渔业社区带来了经济冲击。本研究考察了邓杰内斯蟹和贻贝渔业关闭对两个依赖渔业的社区的经济和社会文化影响。对受该事件影响的两个社区——加利福尼亚州克雷斯克城和华盛顿州长滩的 36 名社区成员进行了半结构化访谈。受访者包括从事渔业、酒店和零售业、地方政府官员、休闲捕捞者和其他人员。访谈探讨了经济、社会、制度和物理领域的弹性方面,其依据是社区的弹性将影响社区抵御赤潮事件的能力。还探讨了脆弱性的维度,包括社区对赤潮事件的敏感性及其适应能力。访谈回应中出现的共同主题表明,经济困难不仅限于与渔业相关的业务,而且渗透到其他部门,特别是酒店业。在延长的渔业关闭期间,人们发现获得财务和就业援助存在重大障碍,特别是对渔民而言。长期以来围绕螃蟹和贝类捕捞和消费的传统受到了干扰,威胁到受影响社区的文化认同。社区成员表示希望更清楚、更全面、更迅速地传播有关渔业关闭管理和与赤潮毒素相关的健康风险的信息。气候变化下赤潮加剧的可能性增加了采取行动提高渔业社区对赤潮相关渔业关闭造成的经济和社会文化影响的弹性的必要性。