Exploring balanced harvesting by using an Atlantis ecosystem model for the Nordic and Barents Seas

To meet the objectives of the Ecosystem Approach to Fisheries, “Balanced Harvesting” (BH) has been suggested as a possible strategy to ensure a high sustainable yield while maintaining ecosystem structure and function. BH proposes a moderate fishing mortality in proportion to productivity spread acr...

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Main Author: Nilsen, Ina
Format: Master Thesis
Language:English
Published: The University of Bergen 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/1956/18087
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author Nilsen, Ina
author_facet Nilsen, Ina
author_sort Nilsen, Ina
collection University of Bergen: Bergen Open Research Archive (BORA-UiB)
description To meet the objectives of the Ecosystem Approach to Fisheries, “Balanced Harvesting” (BH) has been suggested as a possible strategy to ensure a high sustainable yield while maintaining ecosystem structure and function. BH proposes a moderate fishing mortality in proportion to productivity spread across the widest possible range of species, stocks, and sizes in an ecosystem. The intent is a sustainable and overall unselective harvest that reduces alterations to the ecosystem structure by maintaining the relative size and species composition, while increasing total yield. The Norwegian and Barents Seas have been subjected to moderate fishing pressure and elements of an ecosystem-based approach to management for many years. By using a pre-parameterized Atlantis ecosystem model of the Nordic and Barents Seas, we investigated the ecosystem effects of a BH regime. This was done by running simulations with combinations of historic fishing pressure and fishing mortality rates proportional to 25% of the productivity of selected species. The simulations were then compared to a control run where the historical fisheries were applied. The model results imply that implementing a BH regime in the Norwegian and Barents Seas would only produce marginal increases in total yields of commercially exploited stocks, possibly because the Norwegian fisheries already is fairly balanced. The inclusion of non-commercial species in the harvest, on both lower and higher trophic levels, caused unexpectedly drastic changes to the ecosystem in the form of stock collapses or severely changed biomass levels. This study represents the first attempted examination of implementing balanced harvesting based on productivity, using an Atlantis ecosystem model. Masteroppgave i biologi MAMN-BIO BIO399
format Master Thesis
genre Barentshav*
genre_facet Barentshav*
id ftunivbergen:oai:bora.uib.no:1956/18087
institution Open Polar
language English
op_collection_id ftunivbergen
op_relation https://hdl.handle.net/1956/18087
op_rights Copyright the Author. All rights reserved
publishDate 2018
publisher The University of Bergen
record_format openpolar
spelling ftunivbergen:oai:bora.uib.no:1956/18087 2025-01-16T21:12:18+00:00 Exploring balanced harvesting by using an Atlantis ecosystem model for the Nordic and Barents Seas Nilsen, Ina 2018-06-19T22:00:20Z application/pdf https://hdl.handle.net/1956/18087 eng eng The University of Bergen https://hdl.handle.net/1956/18087 Copyright the Author. All rights reserved Fiskebestander Fiskeriforskning Fiskeriforvaltning Barentshavet De Nordiske Hav https://data.ub.uio.no/realfagstermer/c032042 https://data.ub.uio.no/realfagstermer/c004185 https://data.ub.uio.no/realfagstermer/c013664 https://data.ub.uio.no/realfagstermer/c030943 https://data.ub.uio.no/realfagstermer/c013662 751999 Master thesis 2018 ftunivbergen 2023-03-14T17:43:45Z To meet the objectives of the Ecosystem Approach to Fisheries, “Balanced Harvesting” (BH) has been suggested as a possible strategy to ensure a high sustainable yield while maintaining ecosystem structure and function. BH proposes a moderate fishing mortality in proportion to productivity spread across the widest possible range of species, stocks, and sizes in an ecosystem. The intent is a sustainable and overall unselective harvest that reduces alterations to the ecosystem structure by maintaining the relative size and species composition, while increasing total yield. The Norwegian and Barents Seas have been subjected to moderate fishing pressure and elements of an ecosystem-based approach to management for many years. By using a pre-parameterized Atlantis ecosystem model of the Nordic and Barents Seas, we investigated the ecosystem effects of a BH regime. This was done by running simulations with combinations of historic fishing pressure and fishing mortality rates proportional to 25% of the productivity of selected species. The simulations were then compared to a control run where the historical fisheries were applied. The model results imply that implementing a BH regime in the Norwegian and Barents Seas would only produce marginal increases in total yields of commercially exploited stocks, possibly because the Norwegian fisheries already is fairly balanced. The inclusion of non-commercial species in the harvest, on both lower and higher trophic levels, caused unexpectedly drastic changes to the ecosystem in the form of stock collapses or severely changed biomass levels. This study represents the first attempted examination of implementing balanced harvesting based on productivity, using an Atlantis ecosystem model. Masteroppgave i biologi MAMN-BIO BIO399 Master Thesis Barentshav* University of Bergen: Bergen Open Research Archive (BORA-UiB)
spellingShingle Fiskebestander
Fiskeriforskning
Fiskeriforvaltning
Barentshavet
De Nordiske Hav
https://data.ub.uio.no/realfagstermer/c032042
https://data.ub.uio.no/realfagstermer/c004185
https://data.ub.uio.no/realfagstermer/c013664
https://data.ub.uio.no/realfagstermer/c030943
https://data.ub.uio.no/realfagstermer/c013662
751999
Nilsen, Ina
Exploring balanced harvesting by using an Atlantis ecosystem model for the Nordic and Barents Seas
title Exploring balanced harvesting by using an Atlantis ecosystem model for the Nordic and Barents Seas
title_full Exploring balanced harvesting by using an Atlantis ecosystem model for the Nordic and Barents Seas
title_fullStr Exploring balanced harvesting by using an Atlantis ecosystem model for the Nordic and Barents Seas
title_full_unstemmed Exploring balanced harvesting by using an Atlantis ecosystem model for the Nordic and Barents Seas
title_short Exploring balanced harvesting by using an Atlantis ecosystem model for the Nordic and Barents Seas
title_sort exploring balanced harvesting by using an atlantis ecosystem model for the nordic and barents seas
topic Fiskebestander
Fiskeriforskning
Fiskeriforvaltning
Barentshavet
De Nordiske Hav
https://data.ub.uio.no/realfagstermer/c032042
https://data.ub.uio.no/realfagstermer/c004185
https://data.ub.uio.no/realfagstermer/c013664
https://data.ub.uio.no/realfagstermer/c030943
https://data.ub.uio.no/realfagstermer/c013662
751999
topic_facet Fiskebestander
Fiskeriforskning
Fiskeriforvaltning
Barentshavet
De Nordiske Hav
https://data.ub.uio.no/realfagstermer/c032042
https://data.ub.uio.no/realfagstermer/c004185
https://data.ub.uio.no/realfagstermer/c013664
https://data.ub.uio.no/realfagstermer/c030943
https://data.ub.uio.no/realfagstermer/c013662
751999
url https://hdl.handle.net/1956/18087