Responses of fisheries ecosystems to marine heatwaves and other extreme events.

PLoS One

Office of the Assistant Administrator, National Marine Fisheries Service, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, Woods Hole, Massachusetts, United States of America.

Published: December 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • * Research examines the responses of U.S. fisheries to these environmental disturbances, revealing negative immediate effects on biomass, landings, and revenue across various regions, especially for ecosystems with more pelagic species and variable shellfish revenue.
  • * While some ecosystems showed recovery over time, others, like California's, faced ongoing declines, emphasizing the need for understanding and managing the impacts of extreme events for sustainable marine resource management.

Article Abstract

Marine ecosystems and their living marine resources (LMRs) continue to respond to the effects of global change, with environmental factors impacting marine fisheries biomass, distribution, harvest, and associated economic performance. Extreme events such as high-category hurricanes, harmful algal blooms, marine heatwaves, and large-scale hypoxia affect major regions and subregions of United States waters, with their frequency expected to increase over the next decades. The impacts of extreme events on fisheries biomass, harvest, and economic performance have not been examined as closely as a system (i.e., cumulatively), or in terms of their differential effects on particular functional groups of a given system. Among several U.S. subregions, we examined responses of fisheries biomass, landings, and revenue for particular functional groups to large-scale environmental perturbations (i.e., marine heatwaves, Hurricane Katrina, Deepwater Horizon oil spill). Distinct negative short-term consequences to annual fisheries biomass, landings, and revenue were observed in all regions, including at the system-level scale for several ecosystems which have higher proportions of pelagic species composition and variable shellfish-based revenue. In addition, shifts in species composition often were associated with environmental perturbations. Recovery to pre-perturbation levels (both in the immediate years following the event and over the post-event period of study) and resilience at the system level was observed in several cases, although post-event declines in biomass and landings occurred in the California ecosystem. Certain extreme events are expected to become more common in marine environments, with resulting perturbations throughout multiple components of U.S. socioecological systems. The recognition and understanding of the consequences of extreme events throughout marine ecosystems is necessary for effective, holistic, and sustainable management practices.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11623807PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0315224PLOS

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