Sharing the Northeast Arctic cod : possible effects of climate change

The Northeast Arctic cod inhabits the exclusive economic zones of Norway and Russia and migrates extensively between these zones. The stock is shared evenly between the two countries, with a small allocation to third countries. Higher temperatures in the Barents Sea and the Norwegian Sea are expecte...

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Main Author: Hannesson, Rögnvaldur
Format: Report
Language:English
Published: SNF 2004
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11250/165532
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spelling ftnorgehandelshs:oai:openaccess.nhh.no:11250/165532 2023-05-15T14:30:25+02:00 Sharing the Northeast Arctic cod : possible effects of climate change Hannesson, Rögnvaldur 2004-10 87740 bytes application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/11250/165532 eng eng SNF Working paper 2004:43 urn:issn:1503-2140 http://hdl.handle.net/11250/165532 Working paper 2004 ftnorgehandelshs 2021-10-19T20:06:06Z The Northeast Arctic cod inhabits the exclusive economic zones of Norway and Russia and migrates extensively between these zones. The stock is shared evenly between the two countries, with a small allocation to third countries. Higher temperatures in the Barents Sea and the Norwegian Sea are expected to affect the stock, probably increasing its size and leading to a larger share inhabiting the Russian economic zone. It is also conceivable that some spawning will begin to take place off the coast of Russia in addition to the spawning that now occurs exclusively in Norwegian waters. This paper looks at the implication of this for the division of the stock between the two countries. It is found that a greater presence of the stock in the Russian zone would strengthen rather than weaken the Norwegian bargaining position if the unit cost of fish is not sensitive to the size of the stock. If, on the other hand, the fishing costs are proportional to fishing mortality, Norway’s position would be weakened almost on par with the fall in its share of the stock. The paper uses a Beverton-Holt year class model with a Ricker recruitment function. The recruitment function is hump-shaped, implying that a too large spawning stock is harmful for recruitment. Strong density-dependence in the survival of eggs and larvae is a possible reason for this. It is shown that, for a stock being limited by carrying capacity at the pre-recruit stage rather than the post-recruit stage, one may expect a strongly asymmetric curve for sustainable yield as a function of total biomass. The biomass of an exploited population might possibly exceed the biomass of a pristine population under those circumstances. Report Arctic cod Arctic Barents Sea Climate change Northeast Arctic cod Norwegian Sea NHH Brage Open institutional repository (Norwegian School of Economics) Arctic Barents Sea Norway Norwegian Sea
institution Open Polar
collection NHH Brage Open institutional repository (Norwegian School of Economics)
op_collection_id ftnorgehandelshs
language English
description The Northeast Arctic cod inhabits the exclusive economic zones of Norway and Russia and migrates extensively between these zones. The stock is shared evenly between the two countries, with a small allocation to third countries. Higher temperatures in the Barents Sea and the Norwegian Sea are expected to affect the stock, probably increasing its size and leading to a larger share inhabiting the Russian economic zone. It is also conceivable that some spawning will begin to take place off the coast of Russia in addition to the spawning that now occurs exclusively in Norwegian waters. This paper looks at the implication of this for the division of the stock between the two countries. It is found that a greater presence of the stock in the Russian zone would strengthen rather than weaken the Norwegian bargaining position if the unit cost of fish is not sensitive to the size of the stock. If, on the other hand, the fishing costs are proportional to fishing mortality, Norway’s position would be weakened almost on par with the fall in its share of the stock. The paper uses a Beverton-Holt year class model with a Ricker recruitment function. The recruitment function is hump-shaped, implying that a too large spawning stock is harmful for recruitment. Strong density-dependence in the survival of eggs and larvae is a possible reason for this. It is shown that, for a stock being limited by carrying capacity at the pre-recruit stage rather than the post-recruit stage, one may expect a strongly asymmetric curve for sustainable yield as a function of total biomass. The biomass of an exploited population might possibly exceed the biomass of a pristine population under those circumstances.
format Report
author Hannesson, Rögnvaldur
spellingShingle Hannesson, Rögnvaldur
Sharing the Northeast Arctic cod : possible effects of climate change
author_facet Hannesson, Rögnvaldur
author_sort Hannesson, Rögnvaldur
title Sharing the Northeast Arctic cod : possible effects of climate change
title_short Sharing the Northeast Arctic cod : possible effects of climate change
title_full Sharing the Northeast Arctic cod : possible effects of climate change
title_fullStr Sharing the Northeast Arctic cod : possible effects of climate change
title_full_unstemmed Sharing the Northeast Arctic cod : possible effects of climate change
title_sort sharing the northeast arctic cod : possible effects of climate change
publisher SNF
publishDate 2004
url http://hdl.handle.net/11250/165532
geographic Arctic
Barents Sea
Norway
Norwegian Sea
geographic_facet Arctic
Barents Sea
Norway
Norwegian Sea
genre Arctic cod
Arctic
Barents Sea
Climate change
Northeast Arctic cod
Norwegian Sea
genre_facet Arctic cod
Arctic
Barents Sea
Climate change
Northeast Arctic cod
Norwegian Sea
op_relation Working paper
2004:43
urn:issn:1503-2140
http://hdl.handle.net/11250/165532
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