Signature of climate-induced changes in seafood species served in restaurants ...

Climate change is causing shifts in biogeography of marine species, towards higher latitude, deeper waters, or following local temperature gradients. Such species distribution changes are affecting global fisheries through increasing the dominance of warmer-water preferred species as ocean temperatu...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Cheung, William, Ng, John-Paul
Format: Dataset
Language:English
Published: Dryad 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.5061/dryad.8pk0p2nnv
https://datadryad.org/stash/dataset/doi:10.5061/dryad.8pk0p2nnv
Description
Summary:Climate change is causing shifts in biogeography of marine species, towards higher latitude, deeper waters, or following local temperature gradients. Such species distribution changes are affecting global fisheries through increasing the dominance of warmer-water preferred species as ocean temperature increases. Previous modeling analyses projected that climate-induced changes in seafood availability would affect the entire seafood chain. However, observed climate impacts on seafood retailers and consumers have rarely been demonstrated. Seafood restaurants usually rely on the supply of locally caught species, and thus the impacts of changing catches on the food they serve, and consequently on their diners, may be reflected in their menus. In this study, 362 restaurant menus from Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, were collated and analyzed over four different time periods (1880–1960, 1961–1980, 1981–1996, and 2019–2021). Moreover, 148 present-day menus from two other cities north (Anchorage, AK, USA) and ... : Copies of publicly available restaurant menus from Vancouver (Canada), Los Angeles (USA) and Anchorage (USA) dated since the 19th century were collected from the Internet and museum archives. Archives of menus from restaurants in Vancouver collected from The University of British Columbia (UBC) library, Victoria Island University library, the City of Vancouver Archives, and the Museum of Vancouver Archives were surveyed (N = 228). Only menus that have specified a year of publication or a range of years were recorded. The menus were categorized into three different time periods: 1888-1960, 1961-1980, and 1981-1996. In addition, a total of 134 present day (2019 -2021) menus from Vancouver, 72 menus from Los Angeles menus, and 76 from Anchorage were collected online using the restaurants’ websites or other websites where restaurant menus were made available publicly, including TripAdvisor(https://www.tripadvisor.ca/), KAYAK (https://www.ca.kayak.com/), and OpenTable (https://www.opentable.ca/). The name of the ...