Quantitative pathways for Northeast Atlantic fisheries based on climate, ecological-economic and governance modelling scenarios

Here we present quantitative projections of potential futures for ecosystems in the North Atlantic basin generated from coupling a climate change-driven biophysical model (representing ecosystem and fish populations under climate change) and a scenario-driven ecological-economic model (representing...

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Main Authors: Mullon, Christian, Steinmetz, F., Merino, G., Fernandes, J.A., Cheung, W.W.L., Butenschön, M., Barange, M.
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.documentation.ird.fr/hor/fdi:010065853
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spelling ftird:oai:ird.fr:fdi:010065853 2023-05-15T17:31:21+02:00 Quantitative pathways for Northeast Atlantic fisheries based on climate, ecological-economic and governance modelling scenarios Mullon, Christian Steinmetz, F. Merino, G. Fernandes, J.A. Cheung, W.W.L. Butenschön, M. Barange, M. ATLANTIQUE EUROPE 2016 http://www.documentation.ird.fr/hor/fdi:010065853 EN eng http://www.documentation.ird.fr/hor/fdi:010065853 oai:ird.fr:fdi:010065853 Mullon Christian, Steinmetz F., Merino G., Fernandes J.A., Cheung W.W.L., Butenschön M., Barange M. Quantitative pathways for Northeast Atlantic fisheries based on climate, ecological-economic and governance modelling scenarios. Ecological Modelling, 2016, 320, p. 273-291. text 2016 ftird 2020-08-21T06:51:56Z Here we present quantitative projections of potential futures for ecosystems in the North Atlantic basin generated from coupling a climate change-driven biophysical model (representing ecosystem and fish populations under climate change) and a scenario-driven ecological-economic model (representing fleets and industries under economic globalization). Four contrasting scenarios (Baseline, Fortress, Global Commons, Free Trade) were defined from the perspective of alternative regional management and governance of the oceanic basin, providing pathways for the future of ecosystems in the Northeast Atlantic basin by 2040. Results indicate that in the time frame considered: (1) the effects of governance and trade decisions are more significant in determining outcomes than the effects of climate change alone, (2) climate change is likely to result in a poleward latitudinal shift of species ranges and thus resources, with implications for exploitation patterns, (3) the level of fisheries regulation is the most important factor in determining the long term evolution of the fisheries system, (4) coupling climate change and governance impacts demonstrates the complex interaction between different components of this social–ecological system, (5) an important driver of change for the future of the North Atlantic and the European fishing fleets appears to be the interplay between wild fisheries and aquaculture development, and finally (6) scenarios demonstrate that the viability and profit of fisheries industries is highly volatile. This study highlights the need to explore basin-scale policy that combines medium to long-term environmental and socio-economic considerations, and the importance of defining alternative sustainable pathways. Text North Atlantic Northeast Atlantic IRD (Institute de recherche pour le développement): Horizon
institution Open Polar
collection IRD (Institute de recherche pour le développement): Horizon
op_collection_id ftird
language English
description Here we present quantitative projections of potential futures for ecosystems in the North Atlantic basin generated from coupling a climate change-driven biophysical model (representing ecosystem and fish populations under climate change) and a scenario-driven ecological-economic model (representing fleets and industries under economic globalization). Four contrasting scenarios (Baseline, Fortress, Global Commons, Free Trade) were defined from the perspective of alternative regional management and governance of the oceanic basin, providing pathways for the future of ecosystems in the Northeast Atlantic basin by 2040. Results indicate that in the time frame considered: (1) the effects of governance and trade decisions are more significant in determining outcomes than the effects of climate change alone, (2) climate change is likely to result in a poleward latitudinal shift of species ranges and thus resources, with implications for exploitation patterns, (3) the level of fisheries regulation is the most important factor in determining the long term evolution of the fisheries system, (4) coupling climate change and governance impacts demonstrates the complex interaction between different components of this social–ecological system, (5) an important driver of change for the future of the North Atlantic and the European fishing fleets appears to be the interplay between wild fisheries and aquaculture development, and finally (6) scenarios demonstrate that the viability and profit of fisheries industries is highly volatile. This study highlights the need to explore basin-scale policy that combines medium to long-term environmental and socio-economic considerations, and the importance of defining alternative sustainable pathways.
format Text
author Mullon, Christian
Steinmetz, F.
Merino, G.
Fernandes, J.A.
Cheung, W.W.L.
Butenschön, M.
Barange, M.
spellingShingle Mullon, Christian
Steinmetz, F.
Merino, G.
Fernandes, J.A.
Cheung, W.W.L.
Butenschön, M.
Barange, M.
Quantitative pathways for Northeast Atlantic fisheries based on climate, ecological-economic and governance modelling scenarios
author_facet Mullon, Christian
Steinmetz, F.
Merino, G.
Fernandes, J.A.
Cheung, W.W.L.
Butenschön, M.
Barange, M.
author_sort Mullon, Christian
title Quantitative pathways for Northeast Atlantic fisheries based on climate, ecological-economic and governance modelling scenarios
title_short Quantitative pathways for Northeast Atlantic fisheries based on climate, ecological-economic and governance modelling scenarios
title_full Quantitative pathways for Northeast Atlantic fisheries based on climate, ecological-economic and governance modelling scenarios
title_fullStr Quantitative pathways for Northeast Atlantic fisheries based on climate, ecological-economic and governance modelling scenarios
title_full_unstemmed Quantitative pathways for Northeast Atlantic fisheries based on climate, ecological-economic and governance modelling scenarios
title_sort quantitative pathways for northeast atlantic fisheries based on climate, ecological-economic and governance modelling scenarios
publishDate 2016
url http://www.documentation.ird.fr/hor/fdi:010065853
op_coverage ATLANTIQUE
EUROPE
genre North Atlantic
Northeast Atlantic
genre_facet North Atlantic
Northeast Atlantic
op_relation http://www.documentation.ird.fr/hor/fdi:010065853
oai:ird.fr:fdi:010065853
Mullon Christian, Steinmetz F., Merino G., Fernandes J.A., Cheung W.W.L., Butenschön M., Barange M. Quantitative pathways for Northeast Atlantic fisheries based on climate, ecological-economic and governance modelling scenarios. Ecological Modelling, 2016, 320, p. 273-291.
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