Greetings! [ Log in ] [ Register ] [ Intranet ] [ Manage Mailing Lists Subscriptions ]
  • Home
  • About
    • From the President's Office
    • Staff Directory
    • Mission
    • Board of Trustees
    • Membership
    • Employment, Internships and Opportunities
    • Visiting
    • History
  • News & Resources
    • Events Calendar
    • Press Releases
    • News Archive
    • Newsletters & Program Updates
    • Publications
    • Resources for Scientists
    • Requests for Proposals
    • SCAMPI
    • Glossary of Acronyms
    • Ocean Leadership Logos and Style Guide
  • Multimedia
    • YouTube
    • Photos
  • Programs & Partnerships
    • Scientific Ocean Drilling
    • Ship Conversion
    • Ocean Observing
    • Census of Marine Life
    • National Oceanographic Partnership Program
    • U.S. Science Support Program
    • Friends of NOAA
  • Education
    • Marine Geoscience Leadership Symposium
    • Deep Earth Academy
    • Diversity
    • National Ocean Sciences Bowl
    • Ocean Sciences Educators Retreat
  • Ocean Policy & Legislation
    • Science Funding
    • Ocean Governance
    • Ocean Education
    • Climate Change
    • Ocean Leadership Priorities
    • Energy & Mineral Resources
    • Ocean & Coastal Management
    • Ocean Exploration & Observation
    • Marine Conservation
    • Public Policy Forum
    • Legislative Tracker
    • Policy 101
  • Gulf Oil Spill
    • Ocean Leadership's Gulf Oil Spill Scientific Symposium
    • How Our Members Are Responding
    • Federal Response Resources
    • Congressional Action
    • Federal News
    • Gulf Oil Spill-Related News
    • BP’s Response Resources
    • Research Database and Funding Opportunities
    • Public Data Sets
    • Educational Resources
    • Volunteer Opportunities
  • Upcoming Events
    • Travel Support

Home » Discovery » Fisheries and Aquaculture Face Multiple Risks from Climate Change

Fisheries and Aquaculture Face Multiple Risks from Climate Change

Posted by Will Ramos on Thursday, December 24th, 2009 at 10:00 am
Filed under: Discovery,News & Resources
Share

(Click to enlarge image) Coral reef fish caught by artisanal fishers on the Indian Ocean island of Rodrigues. High water temperatures have already killed corals on reefs around the world. (Credit: Image courtesy of University of East Anglia)

A new report, published by the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) of the United Nations, predicts "an ocean of change" for fishers and fish farmers.

(From ScienceDaily) -- It concludes that urgent adaptation measures are required in response to opportunities and threats to food and livelihood provision due to climatic variations.

The study, 'Climate change implications for fisheries and aquaculture', is one of the most comprehensive surveys to date of existing scientific knowledge on the impacts of climate change on fisheries and aquaculture. Covering some 500 scientific papers, the picture the FAO review paints is one of an already-vulnerable sector facing widespread and often profound changes.

The report includes contributions from experts from around the world, including Dr Tim Daw and Prof Katrina Brown of the School of International Development and Prof Neil Adger of the School of Environmental Sciences at UEA. Other contributors come from the WorldFish Center, Globec, Network of Aquaculture Centres in Asia-Pacific, and Fisheries and Oceans Canada.

Dr Daw and Profs Adger and Brown co-authored the chapter 'Climate change and capture fisheries: potential impacts, adaptation and mitigation', which looks at the social vulnerability of fisherfolk to climate change. "Marine and freshwater ecosystems will be profoundly affected by processes like ocean acidification, coral bleaching and altered river flows with obvious impacts on fisherfolk, but it is not just about what happens to the fish," said Dr Daw. "Fishing communities are vulnerable to sea level rise and their livelihoods are threatened by storms and extreme weather. Meanwhile, the social and economic context of fisheries will be disrupted by impacts on security, migration, transport and markets."

"Fisheries are already rapidly evolving due to overexploitation and globalisation. They will suffer from wide range of different impacts from climate change, which may be unpredictable and surprising. The poorest will be least able to adapt to these impacts. For example in Kenya poorer fishers were shown to be less likely to switch to other livelihoods if catches declined."

Prof Adger added: "Climate change is going to be a huge challenge to every sector of society and what we're learning about fisheries shows how difficult adaptation will be, particularly for the poorest parts of the world."

According to the report, marine capture fisheries already facing multiple challenges due to overfishing, habitat loss and weak management are poorly positioned to cope with new problems stemming from climate change. Small island developing states -- which depend on fisheries and aquaculture for at least 50 percent of their animal protein intake -- are in a particularly vulnerable position.

Some 520 million people depend on fisheries and aquaculture as a source of protein and income. For 400 million of the poorest of these, fish provides half or more of their animal protein and dietary minerals. Many fishing and coastal communities already subsist in precarious and vulnerable conditions because of poverty and rural underdevelopment, with their wellbeing often undermined by over-exploitation of fishery resources and degraded ecosystems.

Inland fisheries -- 90 per cent of which are found in Africa and Asia -- are also at risk, threatening the food supply and livelihoods of some of the world's poorest populations. Warming in Africa and central Asia is expected to be above the global mean, and predictions suggest that by 2100 significant negative impacts will be felt across 25 per cent of Africa's inland aquatic ecosystems.

Fish farming will also be affected. Nearly 65 per cent of aquaculture is inland and concentrated mostly in the tropical and subtropical regions of Asia, often in the delta areas of major rivers at the mid- to upper levels of tidal ranges. Sea level rise over the next decades will increase upstream salinity, affecting fish farms.

A crucial issue highlighted by the report relates to how well such communities will be able to adapt to change. For example, even if African coastal fisheries do not face huge impacts, the region's 'adaptive capacity' to respond to climate change is low, rendering communities there highly vulnerable even to minor changes in climate and temperature.

Print

Related Posts:

  • Finally: A National Ocean Policy
  • Program Update: Ocean Research and Resources Advisory Panel – August 2010
  • High Levels of Carbon Dioxide Threaten Oyster Survival
  • White House Nominates Chief Scientist for NOAA
  • Great Barrier Reef Corals Unveil Sea-Level Changes and Climate History

Comments are closed.

« Home | « Previous Page

Discovery »

Subseafloor Observatories Installed to Run Dynamic Experiments

Subseafloor Observatories Installed to Run Dynamic Experiments An international team of scientists has just returned from two months at sea near British Columbia, Canada, where they installed two observatories in the ocean floor to run innovative experiments at the bottom of the sea.
More articles »

Understanding »

Program Update: Deep Earth Academy - August 2010

Program Update: Deep Earth Academy - August 2010 During the last month of operations onboard the JOIDES Resolution, the six person Outreach team sailing on Integrated Ocean Drilling Program (IODP) Expedition 327 Juan de Fuca Hydrogeology has been busy working on both group and individual projects.
More articles »

Action »

NIH to Launch Gulf Oil Spill Health Study

NIH to Launch Gulf Oil Spill Health Study The National Institutes of Health will launch a multi-year study this fall to look at the potential health effects from the oil spill in the Gulf region.
More articles »

Be an Ocean Leader

Subscribe via Twitter
1261 Followers
Subscribe via Facebook
384 Fans
Subscribe via RSS
310 Readers
Subscribe via Email
Subscribe

Upcoming Events

  • September 20, 2010:
    • OCEANS 2010 MTS/IEEE Seattle (all day)
  • October 12, 2010:
    • Dynamic Positioning Conference (all day)
  • October 14, 2010:
    • Techno-Ocean 2010 (all day)
  • October 15, 2010:
    • NSF Cascadia Initiative Workshop (all day)
  • October 21, 2010:
    • Board of Trustees Meeting: October 21-22, 2010 (all day)
  • October 28, 2010:
    • From Observation to Forecast: Tools for Understanding a Changing World (all day)
  • October 29, 2010:
    • 2010 Ridge 2000 Community Meeting (all day)
  • November 3, 2010:
    • Trop Med Annual Meeting - Symposium (all day)
  • November 4, 2010:
    • 8th Marine Law Symposium (all day)
  • February 7, 2011:
    • Arctic Technology Conference (all day)

What's Hot This Month

  • More IODP Expedition 320 Whale SharkMore IODP Expedition 320 Whale Shark: IODP Expedition 320: Video of a whale shark....
  • Zoning the Ocean May Help Endangered Whales to RecoverZoning the Ocean May Help Endangered Whales to Recover: Scientists in Scotland, Canada and the US have proposed a new method to identify priority areas for whale conservation....
  • Tagging the Great White Shark...and a Few of His FriendsTagging the Great White Shark...and a Few of His Friends: What will some 4,000 of the smartest dressed elephant seals, tuna fish, albatrosses, leatherback sea turtles, great whit...
  • Outlook "Poor" for Great Barrier ReefOutlook "Poor" for Great Barrier Reef: Australia's Great Barrier Reef, the world's largest living organism, is under grave threat from climate warming and coas...
  • New Polar Bear Rule Sent to White HouseNew Polar Bear Rule Sent to White House: Protection for polar bears' shrinking icy habitat is the subject of a proposed rule sent to the White House by the Inter...
  •  13 Days of Halloween: What Monsters Have Really Existed in the Sea? Are there any left? 13 Days of Halloween: What Monsters Have Really Existed in the Sea? Are there any left?: The Webster's dictionary defines the word monster as "an animal of strange or terrifying shape" and "one unusually large...
  • Barcoding Endangered Sea TurtlesBarcoding Endangered Sea Turtles: Conservation geneticists who study sea turtles have a new tool to help track this highly migratory and endangered group ...
  • ONW: Week of August 30, 2010 - Number 101ONW: Week of August 30, 2010 - Number 101: The staff here at Ocean Leadership works hard to make certain that each week we provide you with the most useful and tim...
  • Program Update: Ocean Observatories Initiative - August 2010Program Update: Ocean Observatories Initiative - August 2010: The Ocean Observatories Initiative (OOI) successfully completed its first annual Operations & Maintenance Review, conduc...
  • Great White Shark Amazes Scientists with 4,000-foot Dive into AbyssGreat White Shark Amazes Scientists with 4,000-foot Dive into Abyss: Scientists revealed that the 15-foot shark they've named "Shack" probed to 1,200 meters, or 3,937 feet, as it traveled a...

Comments

Archives

Who's Online

30 visitors online now
12 guests, 18 bots, 0 members
Map of Visitors

Recent Posts

  • Assistant Administrator, Office of Oceanic and Atmospheric Research (OAR), NOAA
  • NIH to Launch Gulf Oil Spill Health Study
  • Subseafloor Observatories Installed to Run Dynamic Experiments
  • BP's Missing Research Money
  • Full-Time Faculty (Assistant/Associate Professor) in Marine Biology, APU

RSS JOIDES Resolution Blog

  • Safety First
  • On My Way
  • Waiting for the Arrival
  • Watch the JR come into port!
  • Beginning at the end

RSS ScienceDaily

  • Novel sensing mechanism discovered in dendritic cells to increase immune response to HIV
  • Insulin may reduce several inflammatory factors induced by bacterial infection
  • Previously known as animal-only pigment, bilirubin now confirmed in Bird of Paradise flower
  • Structure for three intrinsically disordered proteins determined
  • Intelligent Battery project opens new ground in energy storage applications
Web design by Will Ramos | © Copyright Consortium for Ocean Leadership 2007-2010. All Rights Reserved. | 50 queries in 1.651 seconds.