Volume 79, Issues 3–4, 10 February 2010, Pages 427–435

Impact of climate variability on marine ecosystems: A comparative approach

Edited By Jürgen Alheit, Ken F. Drinkwater and R. Ian Perry

Sensitivity of marine systems to climate and fishing: Concepts, issues and management responses

  • a Fisheries and Oceans Canada, Pacific Biological Station, Nanaimo, B.C., Canada V9T 6N7
  • b IRD, UMR EME 212, Centre de Recherche Halieutique Méditerranéenne et Tropicale, Avenue Jean Monnet, BP 171, 34203 Sète France
  • c ICES/GLOBEC Coordinator, DTU Aqua - Danish Institute of Aquatic Resources, Technical University of Denmark, Charlottenlund Slot, DK-2920 Charlottenlund, Denmark
  • d Centre for Environment, Fisheries and Aquaculture Science, Lowestoft Laboratory, Suffolk NR33 0HT, and School of Environmental Sciences, University of East Anglia, Norwich, NR4 7TJ, United Kingdom
  • e Institute for Hydrobiology and Fisheries Science, University of Hamburg, Olbersweg 24, D-22767 Hamburg, Germany
  • f Institut Français de Recherche pour l'Exploitation de la Mer, Département Ecologie et Modèles pour l'Halieutique, rue de l'île d'Yeu, BP21105, 44311 Nantes Cedex 3, France

Abstract

Modern fisheries research and management must understand and take account of the interactions between climate and fishing, rather than try to disentangle their effects and address each separately. These interactions are significant drivers of change in exploited marine systems and have ramifications for ecosystems and those who depend on the services they provide. We discuss how fishing and climate forcing interact on individual fish, marine populations, marine communities, and ecosystems to bring these levels into states that are more sensitive to (i.e. more strongly related with) climate forcing. Fishing is unlikely to alter the sensitivities of individual finfish and invertebrates to climate forcing. It will remove individuals with specific characteristics from the gene pool, thereby affecting structure and function at higher levels of organisation. Fishing leads to a loss of older age classes, spatial contraction, loss of sub-units, and alteration of life history traits in populations, making them more sensitive to climate variability at interannual to interdecadal scales. Fishing reduces the mean size of individuals and mean trophic level of communities, decreasing their turnover time leading them to track environmental variability more closely. Marine ecosystems under intense exploitation evolve towards stronger bottom–up control and greater sensitivity to climate forcing. Because climate change occurs slowly, its effects are not likely to have immediate impacts on marine systems but will be manifest as the accumulation of the interactions between fishing and climate variability — unless threshold limits are exceeded. Marine resource managers need to develop approaches which maintain the resilience of individuals, populations, communities and ecosystems to the combined and interacting effects of climate and fishing. Overall, a less-heavily fished marine system, and one which shifts the focus from individual species to functional groups and fish communities, is likely to provide more stable catches with climate variability and change than would a heavily fished system.

Keywords

  • Climate variability;
  • Climate change;
  • Communities;
  • Ecosystems;
  • Fisheries management;
  • Fishing;
  • Populations
Corresponding author. Tel.: +1 250 756 7137; fax: +1 250 756 7053.
1

Equal authorship.

2

Current address: Institute of Marine Research, Postboks 6404, 9294 Tromso, Norway.