Sustainable Fishery, Department of Economics, Christian-Albrechts-Universität zu Kiel, Kiel, Germany; Biodiversity Economics, German Centre for Integrative Biodiversity Research (iDiv), Halle-Jena-Leipzig, Deutscher Platz 5e, 04103, Leipzig, Germany.
Biodiversity Economics, German Centre for Integrative Biodiversity Research (iDiv), Halle-Jena-Leipzig, Deutscher Platz 5e, 04103, Leipzig, Germany; Department of Economics, Leipzig University, Grimmaische Str. 12, 04109, Leipzig, Germany.
J Environ Manage. 2019 May 15;238:110-118. doi: 10.1016/j.jenvman.2019.02.105. Epub 2019 Mar 5.
Human-induced climate change such as ocean warming and acidification, threatens marine ecosystems and associated fisheries. In the Western Baltic cod stock socio-ecological links are particularly important, with many relying on cod for their livelihoods. A series of recent experiments revealed that cod populations are negatively affected by climate change, but an ecological-economic assessment of the combined effects, and advice on optimal adaptive management are still missing. For Western Baltic cod, the increase in larval mortality due to ocean acidification has experimentally been quantified. Time-series analysis allows calculating the temperature effect on recruitment. Here, we include both processes in a stock-recruitment relationship, which is part of an ecological-economic optimization model. The goal was to quantify the effects of climate change on the triple bottom line (ecological, economic, social) of the Western Baltic cod fishery. Ocean warming has an overall negative effect on cod recruitment in the Baltic. Optimal management would react by lowering fishing mortality with increasing temperature, to create a buffer against climate change impacts. The negative effects cannot be fully compensated, but even at 3 °C warming above the 2014 level, a reduced but viable fishery would be possible. However, when accounting for combined effects of ocean warming and acidification, even optimal fisheries management cannot adapt to changes beyond a warming of +1.5° above the current level. Our results highlight the need for multi-factorial climate change research, in order to provide the best available, most realistic, and precautionary advice for conservation of exploited species as well as their connected socio-economic systems.
人为引起的气候变化,如海洋变暖酸化,威胁着海洋生态系统和相关渔业。在波罗的海西部鳕鱼种群中,社会生态联系尤为重要,许多人依靠鳕鱼维持生计。最近的一系列实验表明,气候变化对鳕鱼种群产生了负面影响,但对于综合影响的生态经济评估以及关于最佳适应性管理的建议仍然缺乏。对于波罗的海西部的鳕鱼来说,海洋酸化导致的幼鱼死亡率增加已经通过实验进行了量化。时间序列分析可以计算出温度对补充量的影响。在这里,我们将这两个过程纳入到一个种群补充关系中,该关系是生态经济优化模型的一部分。目标是量化气候变化对波罗的海西部鳕鱼渔业的三重底线(生态、经济、社会)的影响。海洋变暖对波罗的海鳕鱼的补充总体上有负面影响。最佳管理将通过随着温度的升高降低捕捞死亡率来做出反应,以应对气候变化的影响。负面影响无法完全得到补偿,但即使在比 2014 年水平高出 3°C 的变暖情况下,仍有可能维持一个规模较小但可行的渔业。然而,当考虑到海洋变暖与酸化的综合影响时,即使是最佳的渔业管理也无法适应比当前水平高出+1.5°C 的变暖变化。我们的研究结果强调了需要进行多因素气候变化研究,以便为受捕捞物种及其相关社会经济系统的保护提供最佳的、最现实的和预防性的建议。