Climate change, fisheries management and fishing aptitude affecting spatial and temporal distributions of the Barents Sea cod fishery
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/11752Date
2017-10-26Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Author
Eide, ArneAbstract
Climate change is expected to influence spatial
and temporal distributions of fish stocks. The aim of this
paper is to compare climate change impact on a fishery
with other factors impacting the performance of fishing
fleets. The fishery in question is the Northeast Arctic cod
fishery, a well-documented fishery where data on spatial
and temporal distributions are available. A cellular
automata model is developed for the purpose of
mimicking possible distributional patterns and different
management alternatives are studied under varying
assumptions on the fleets’ fishing aptitude. Fisheries
management and fishing aptitude, also including
technological development and local knowledge, turn out
to have the greatest impact on the spatial distribution of the
fishing effort, when comparing the IPCC’s SRES A1B
scenario with repeated sequences of the current
environmental situation over a period of 45 years. In both
cases, the highest profits in the simulation period of
45 years are obtained at low exploitation levels and
moderate fishing aptitude.