Impact of climate change on tropical fisheries would create ripples across the world

These linkages enable the flow of benefits, including food, livelihoods and government revenue, from tropical fisheries to extratropical locations. Fish from the tropics sold in temperate-zone markets provides jobs and revenue to tropical nations. That flow of benefits is threatened by the larger impact of climate change on tropical fishery systems. EEZs, exclusive economic zones. Credit: Lam et al, Nature Reviews Earth & Environment

Tropical oceans and fisheries are threatened by climate change, generating impacts that will affect the sustainable development of both local economies and communities, and regions outside the tropics through ‘telecoupling’ of human-natural systems, such as seafood trade and distant-water fishing, says a scientific review from UBC and international researchers.


Seafood is the most highly traded food commodity globally, with contributing more than 50 per cent of the global fish catch, an average of $USD 96 billion annually. Available scientific evidence consistently shows that tropical marine habitats, fish stocks and fisheries are most vulnerable to oceanic changes associated with climate change. However, the highlights that telecoupling, or linkages between distant human-natural systems, could generate cascades of climate change impacts from the tropics that propagate to other ‘extra-‘ tropical natural systems and human communities globally.

“Telecoupling interactions between two or more linked areas over distance between tropical fisheries and elsewhere include distant-water fishing, the international seafood supply chain, transboundary fisheries resources and their governance would allow benefits derived from tropical fisheries to transfer to the people in the extratropical regions,” said Vicky Lam, lead author and research associate in the UBC’s Institute for the Oceans and Fisheries. “Although these linkages could enable the flow of benefits, including food, livelihoods and government revenue, from tropical fisheries to extratropical locations, their dependence on tropical fisheries also exposes them to the negative consequences of climate change in tropical regions. The effects of climate change on tropical fisheries also affect the profitability and employment opportunities of fish-processing industries in extratropical regions.”

Impact of climate change on tropical fisheries would create ripples across the world
Annual average value (US$ million) of fish exports from Pacific Island countries and territories (PICTs) (panel a), Brazil (panel b) and Africa (panel c) to their main trading partners for 2014-2018 (left), and annual average landed values (US$ billions) of fish caught in the three corresponding groups of exclusive economic zones (EEZs) by the countries and territories in those regions and by distant-water fishing nations between 2007 and 2016 (right). There are close linkages between the tropical regions and the extratropical nations through trade and distant-water fishing, indicating that any climate-related changes to tropical fisheries have socio-economic implications for many extratropical nations. Note that values from the Pacific Islands region are for tuna only, and the catch values refer to tuna caught from the Western and Central Pacific Fisheries Convention Area, which is larger than the combined EEZs of PICTs (see Supplementary Tables 1,4-8). Source of data for panel a: Pacific Islands Forum Fisheries Agency. Credit: Lam et al, Nature Reviews Earth & Environment

“Pacific Island countries and territories, for example, are expected to see a redistribution of skipjack and —their two most exported fish species—that could see decreased catches of between 10 and 40 per cent by 2050 in many countries such as Palau and the Solomon Islands, while catches are expected to increase by 15 to 20 per cent in Kiribati and the Cook Islands. This will have a tremendous effect on the economies of these small island developing states,” said Rashid Sumaila, co-author and professor at UBC’s Institute for the Oceans and Fisheries and School of Public Policy and Global Affairs. “There are similar projections in African nations, where climate-related changes are expected to decrease the value of landed catch by approximately 20 per cent by 2050, as well as reduce fisheries-related jobs by 50 per cent.”

To reduce the effect of climate change on the benefits derived from tropical fisheries, both locally and in extra-tropical regions, the root causes of climate-driven problems in tropical fisheries need to be recognized and rectified. Effective and practical adaptation and mitigation solutions with stakeholder commitment and involvement, as well as supporting policies, are therefore necessary in the tropics.

“We already see that there are close linkages between the tropical regions and the extra-tropical nations through trade and distant-water fishing” said William Cheung, co-author and professor at UBC’s Institute for the Oceans and Fisheries. “Solving impacts in the tropics will benefit the whole world; this provides an additional argument for non-tropical countries to support mitigation and adaptation in tropical countries.”


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More information:
Vicky W. Y. Lam et al, Climate change, tropical fisheries and prospects for sustainable development, Nature Reviews Earth & Environment (2020). DOI: 10.1038/s43017-020-0071-9

Citation:
Impact of climate change on tropical fisheries would create ripples across the world (2020, August 6)
retrieved 7 August 2020
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