Institut de Ciència i Tecnologia Ambientals, Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona, 08193 Cerdanyola del Vallès, Spain;
School of Earth, Environmental and Marine Science, University of Texas Rio Grande Valley, Port Isabel, TX 78578.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2020 Nov 24;117(47):29748-29758. doi: 10.1073/pnas.2008256117. Epub 2020 Nov 9.
Nuclear war, beyond its devastating direct impacts, is expected to cause global climatic perturbations through injections of soot into the upper atmosphere. Reduced temperature and sunlight could drive unprecedented reductions in agricultural production, endangering global food security. However, the effects of nuclear war on marine wild-capture fisheries, which significantly contribute to the global animal protein and micronutrient supply, remain unexplored. We simulate the climatic effects of six war scenarios on fish biomass and catch globally, using a state-of-the-art Earth system model and global process-based fisheries model. We also simulate how either rapidly increased fish demand (driven by food shortages) or decreased ability to fish (due to infrastructure disruptions), would affect global catches, and test the benefits of strong prewar fisheries management. We find a decade-long negative climatic impact that intensifies with soot emissions, with global biomass and catch falling by up to 18 ± 3% and 29 ± 7% after a US-Russia war under business-as-usual fishing-similar in magnitude to the end-of-century declines under unmitigated global warming. When war occurs in an overfished state, increasing demand increases short-term (1 to 2 y) catch by at most ∼30% followed by precipitous declines of up to ∼70%, thus offsetting only a minor fraction of agricultural losses. However, effective prewar management that rebuilds fish biomass could ensure a short-term catch buffer large enough to replace ∼43 ± 35% of today's global animal protein production. This buffering function in the event of a global food emergency adds to the many previously known economic and ecological benefits of effective and precautionary fisheries management.
核战争除了其破坏性的直接影响外,预计还会通过向高层大气注入烟尘来引起全球气候紊乱。温度和阳光的减少可能会导致农业产量以前所未有的速度下降,从而危及全球粮食安全。然而,核战争对海洋野生捕捞渔业的影响——这些渔业对全球动物蛋白质和微量营养素供应有重大贡献——仍未得到探索。我们使用最先进的地球系统模型和全球基于过程的渔业模型,模拟了六种战争情景对鱼类生物量和全球捕捞量的气候影响。我们还模拟了由于食物短缺而导致鱼类需求迅速增加,或者由于基础设施破坏而导致捕鱼能力下降,将如何影响全球捕捞量,并测试了战前渔业管理的好处。我们发现,在烟尘排放的作用下,气候将产生长达十年的负面影响,生物量和捕捞量将下降 18±3%和 29±7%,这与未缓解的全球变暖情况下本世纪末的下降幅度相当。当战争发生在过度捕捞的情况下,增加需求最多只能在短期内(1 到 2 年)将捕捞量提高约 30%,随后急剧下降高达约 70%,因此只能抵消农业损失的一小部分。然而,有效的战前管理可以重建鱼类生物量,从而确保短期的捕捞量缓冲足以替代当今全球动物蛋白质产量的 43±35%。在全球粮食紧急情况下,这种缓冲功能增加了有效和预防性渔业管理的许多先前已知的经济和生态效益。