Assessing the effects of climate change on US West Coast sablefish productivity and on the performance of alternative management strategies

被引:14
作者
Haltuch, Melissa A. [1 ]
A'mar, Z. Teresa [2 ]
Bond, Nicholas A. [3 ]
Valero, Juan L. [4 ]
机构
[1] NOAA, Fisheries Res Anal & Monitoring, Northwest Fisheries Sci Ctr, Natl Marine Fisheries Serv, Seattle, WA 98115 USA
[2] Fred Hutchinson Canc Res Ctr, 1124 Columbia St, Seattle, WA 98104 USA
[3] Univ Washington, JISAO, Seattle, WA 98195 USA
[4] Ctr Adv Populat Assessment Methodol CAPAM, La Jolla, CA USA
关键词
climate; management strategy evaluation; recruitment; sablefish; POLLOCK THERAGRA-CHALCOGRAMMA; LIFE-HISTORY STRATEGIES; FISH STOCK ASSESSMENT; EASTERN BERING-SEA; ANOPLOPOMA-FIMBRIA; CALIFORNIA CURRENT; RECRUITMENT; FISHERIES; FUTURE; DYNAMICS;
D O I
10.1093/icesjms/fsz029
中图分类号
S9 [水产、渔业];
学科分类号
0908 ;
摘要
US West Coast sablefish are economically valuable, with landings of 11.8 million pounds valued at over $31 million during 2016, making assessing and understanding the impact of climate change on the California Current (CC) stock a priority for (1) forecasting future stock productivity, and (2) testing the robustness of management strategies to climate impacts. Sablefish recruitment is related to large-scale climate forcing indexed by regionally correlated sea level (SL) and zooplankton communities that pelagic young-of-the-year sablefish feed upon. This study forecasts trends in future sablefish productivity using SL from Global Climate Models (GCMs) and explores the robustness of harvest control rules (HCRs) to climate driven changes in recruitment using management strategy evaluation (MSE). Future sablefish recruitment is likely to be similar to historical recruitment but may be less variable. Most GCMs suggest that decadal SL trends result in recruitments persisting at lower levels through about 2040 followed by higher levels that are more favorable for sablefish recruitment through 2060. Although this MSE suggests that spawning biomass and catches will decline, and then stabilize, into the future under both HCRs, the sablefish stock does not fall below the stock size that leads to fishery closures.
引用
收藏
页码:1524 / 1542
页数:19
相关论文
共 54 条
  • [31] The Pacific decadal oscillation
    Mantua, NJ
    Hare, SR
    [J]. JOURNAL OF OCEANOGRAPHY, 2002, 58 (01) : 35 - 44
  • [32] McDevitt S. A., 1987, STATUS SABLEFISH RES
  • [33] Stock synthesis: A biological and statistical framework for fish stock assessment and fishery management
    Methot, Richard D., Jr.
    Wetzel, Chantell R.
    [J]. FISHERIES RESEARCH, 2013, 142 : 86 - 99
  • [34] Adjusting for bias due to variability of estimated recruitments in fishery assessment models
    Methot, Richard D., Jr.
    Taylor, Ian G.
    [J]. CANADIAN JOURNAL OF FISHERIES AND AQUATIC SCIENCES, 2011, 68 (10) : 1744 - 1760
  • [35] Coastal upwelling in a warmer future
    Mote, PW
    Mantua, NJ
    [J]. GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH LETTERS, 2002, 29 (23) : 53 - 1
  • [36] Expected declines in recruitment of walleye pollock (Theragra chalcogramma) in the eastern Bering Sea under future climate change
    Mueter, Franz J.
    Bond, Nicholas A.
    Ianelli, James N.
    Hollowed, Anne B.
    [J]. ICES JOURNAL OF MARINE SCIENCE, 2011, 68 (06) : 1284 - 1296
  • [37] NMFS, 2017, FISH US
  • [38] Linking physiological, population and socio-economic assessments of climate-change impacts on fisheries
    Norman-Lopez, Ana
    Plaganyi, Eva
    Skewes, Tim
    Poloczanska, Elvira
    Dennis, Darren
    Gibbs, Mark
    Bayliss, Peter
    [J]. FISHERIES RESEARCH, 2013, 148 : 18 - 26
  • [39] PFMC, 2016, PAC COAST GROUNDF FI
  • [40] Management strategy evaluation: best practices
    Punt, Andre E.
    Butterworth, Doug S.
    de Moor, Carryn L.
    de Oliveira, Jose A. A.
    Haddon, Malcolm
    [J]. FISH AND FISHERIES, 2016, 17 (02) : 303 - 334