Global gridded fishing exploitation patterns (F/FMSY) of demersal and pelagic fish

Global gridded fishing mortality (F) relative to the fishing mortality that supports maximum sustainable yield (FMSY) for three fish functional types: forage fish, large pelagic fish, and demersal fish. Years 1861-2004 0.5-degree spatial resolution Outputs can be used to simulate historical fishing...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: van Denderen, Daniel, Jacobsen, Nis, Petrik, Colleen M
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:unknown
Published: Zenodo 2024
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Online Access:https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.10696993
Description
Summary:Global gridded fishing mortality (F) relative to the fishing mortality that supports maximum sustainable yield (FMSY) for three fish functional types: forage fish, large pelagic fish, and demersal fish. Years 1861-2004 0.5-degree spatial resolution Outputs can be used to simulate historical fishing patterns of pelagic and demersal fish in ecosystem models. The F/FMSY needs to be multiplied with FMSY of each fish type in the model to obtain F.FMSY depends on fish theoretical model specification and assumptions. The F/FMSY timeseries are estimated using reconstructed catch data and a data limited catch assessment model for all LME × functional type combinations with intermediate and high catches. For all remaining combinations and the high seas, F/FMSY timeseries are estimated by converting nominal effort timeseries per functional type to an F/FMSY using conversion factors. The estimated F/FMSY timeseries are allocated per functional type, ecosystem, and year across a 0.5-degree spatial grid in proportion to total gridded effort in each ecosystem. The gridded F/FMSY are used as input into the FEISTY model forced by outputs from GFDL’s ocean model (MOM6-COBALTv2) to generate historical time series of fish biomass and catch. The catch and biomass simulated FEISTY outputs are available between 1961 and 2004 for each LME and the High seas. Reference to the analysis: To be added, in review Additional data sources: Reconstructed fisheries catches: Watson, R. A database of global marine commercial, small-scale, illegal and unreported fisheries catch 1950–2014. Sci Data 4, 170039 (2017). https://doi.org/10.1038/sdata.2017.39 Global gridded fishing effort data reconstruction: Rousseau, Y., Blanchard, J. L., Novaglio, C., Pinnell, K., Tittensor, D. P., Watson, R. A., & Ye, Y. (2022). Global Fishing Effort [Data]. Institute for Marine and Antarctic Studies (IMAS), University of Tasmania (UTAS).