Simulating the impacts of fishing on central and eastern tropical Pacific ecosystem using multispecies size-spectrum model

被引:0
|
作者
Qinqin Lin [1 ]
Yuying Zhang [2 ]
Jiangfeng Zhu [1 ,3 ]
机构
[1] College of Marine Sciences, Shanghai Ocean University
[2] Department of Biological Sciences, Florida International University (Biscayne Bay Campus)
[3] Key Laboratory of Sustainable Exploitation of Oceanic Fisheries Resources of Ministry of Education, Shanghai Ocean University
基金
中国国家自然科学基金;
关键词
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
S931.1 [渔业资源生态学];
学科分类号
071012 ; 0713 ;
摘要
The size-spectrum model has been considered a useful tool for understanding the structures of marine ecosystems and examining management implications for fisheries. Based on Chinese tuna longline observer data from the central and eastern tropical Pacific Ocean and published data, we developed and calibrated a multispecies size-spectrum model of twenty common and commercially important species in this area. We then use the model to project the status of the species from 2016 to 2050 under five constant-fishing-mortality management scenarios:(1) F=0;(2) F=Frecent, the average fishing mortality from 2013 to 2015;(3) F=0.5 F=Frecent;(4) F=2 F=Frecentand(5) F=3 F=Frecent. Several ecological indicators were used to track the dynamics of the community structure under different levels of fishing, including the mean body weight, slope of community size spectra(Slope), and total biomass. The validation demonstrated that size-at-age data of nine main catch species between our model predictions and those empirical data from assessments by the Western and Central Pacific Fisheries Commission matched well, with the R~2>0.9. The direct effect of fishing was the decreasing abundance of largesized individuals. The mean body weight in the community decreased by ~1 500 g(21%) by 2050 when F doubled from F=Frecentto 2 F=Frecent. The higher the fishing mortality, the steeper the Slope was. The projection also indicated that fishing impacts reflected by the total biomass did not increase proportionally with the increasing fishing mortality. The biomass of the main target tuna species was still abundant over the projection period under the recent fishing mortality, except Albacore tuna(Thunnus alalunga). For sharks and billfishes, their biomass remained at relatively higher levels only under the F=0 scenario. The results can serve as a scientific reference for alternative management strategies in the tropical Pacific Ocean.
引用
收藏
页码:34 / 43
页数:10
相关论文
共 48 条
  • [41] Estimating natural mortality rates and simulating fishing scenarios for Gulf of Mexico red grouper (Epinephelus morio) using the ecosystem model OSMOSE-WFS
    Gruess, Arnaud
    Schirripa, Michael J.
    Chagaris, David
    Velez, Laure
    Shin, Yunne-Jai
    Verley, Philippe
    Oliveros-Ramos, Ricardo
    Ainsworth, Cameron H.
    JOURNAL OF MARINE SYSTEMS, 2016, 154 : 264 - 279
  • [42] Population abundance and size-structure of an eastern tropical Pacific reef coral after the 1997-98 ENSO: A simulation model predicts field measures
    Fong, P
    Glynn, PW
    BULLETIN OF MARINE SCIENCE, 2001, 69 (01) : 187 - 202
  • [43] Representation of extreme El Nino events and associated atmospheric moisture flux divergence in the central-eastern tropical Pacific in a CMIP6 model ensemble
    Sanabria, Janeet
    Neukom, Raphael
    Llacza, Alan
    Salzmann, Nadine
    Calanca, Pierluigi
    WEATHER AND CLIMATE EXTREMES, 2025, 47
  • [44] Are the extreme marine heatwave events in the central-eastern tropical Pacific predictable 30-60 days in advance by NUIST CFS1.1 model?
    Lin, Lin
    Yu, Yueyue
    Lu, Chuhan
    Luo, Jingjia
    Chen, Lin
    Ma, Jing
    Guan, Zhaoyong
    Wu, Jiye
    ATMOSPHERIC RESEARCH, 2023, 289
  • [45] Using a qualitative model to explore the impacts of ecosystem and anthropogenic drivers upon declining marine survival in Pacific salmon (vol 45, pg 278, 2017)
    Sobocinski, Kathryn L.
    Greene, Correigh M.
    Schmidt, Michael W.
    ENVIRONMENTAL CONSERVATION, 2018, 45 (03) : 306 - 306
  • [46] Understanding and simulating the link between African easterly waves and Atlantic tropical cyclones using a regional climate model: the role of domain size and lateral boundary conditions
    Louis-Philippe Caron
    Colin G. Jones
    Climate Dynamics, 2012, 39 : 113 - 135
  • [47] Understanding and simulating the link between African easterly waves and Atlantic tropical cyclones using a regional climate model: the role of domain size and lateral boundary conditions
    Caron, Louis-Philippe
    Jones, Colin G.
    CLIMATE DYNAMICS, 2012, 39 (1-2) : 113 - 135
  • [48] North Pacific basin-scale differences in lower and higher trophic level marine ecosystem responses to climate impacts using a nutrient-phytoplankton-zooplankton model coupled to a fish bioenergetics model
    Megrey, Bernard A.
    Rose, Kenneth A.
    Ito, Shin-ichi
    Hay, Douglas E.
    Werner, Francisco E.
    Yamanaka, Yasuhiro
    Aita, Maki Noguchi
    ECOLOGICAL MODELLING, 2007, 202 (1-2) : 196 - 210