Climate
Change Means Fish Are Moving Faster Than Fishing Rules
Climate
change is forcing fish species to shift their
habitats faster than the world’s system for allocating fish stocks,
exacerbating international fisheries conflicts, according to a study led
by a Rutgers University–New Brunswick researcher.
The study, published online in the journal Science today,
showed for the first time that new fisheries are likely to appear in more than
70 countries all over the world as a result of climate change. History has
shown that newly shared fisheries often spark conflict among nations.
Conflict leads to overfishing, which reduces the food, profit and
employment fisheries can provide, and can also fracture international relations
in other areas beyond fisheries. A future with lower greenhouse gas emissions,
like the targets under the 2015 Paris climate agreement, would reduce the
potential for conflict, the study says.
“Most people may not understand that the right to harvest
particular species of fish is often decided by national and regional fisheries
management bodies,” said Malin Pinsky, an
assistant professor of ecology, evolution and natural resources in Rutgers–New
Brunswick’s School of Environmental and Biological Sciences.
“Those bodies have made the rules based on the notion that particular fish species live in particular waters and don’t move much. Well, they’re moving now because climate change is warming ocean temperatures.”
In a recent study, Pinsky and Rutgers postdoctoral associate James Morley reported that many commercially
important fish species could move their ranges hundreds of miles northward in
search of colder water. This movement has already begun, and the results have
been highly disruptive for fisheries.
“Consider flounder, which have already shifted their range 250
miles farther north,” Pinsky said. “Federal fisheries rules have allocated many
of those fish to fishers in North Carolina, and now they have to steam hundreds
of extra miles to catch their flounder.”
Pinsky and his co-authors cite other examples of the disruption of
fisheries causing international disputes, including the “mackerel war” between
Iceland and the European Union (EU).
Under rules agreed to by EU member nations, fishers harvest a
certain number of mackerel each year.
But by 2007, those mackerel had begun to move to colder waters
near Iceland, which is not an EU member. Iceland began fishing the sudden
abundance of mackerel, but could not agree with the EU on sustainable fishing
limits. The dispute became a trade war and is still ongoing.
Lobster fishers from the United States and Canada have also come
into conflict over the lobster fishery, which is also moving north from New
England to the Canadian Maritime Provinces.
Given climate change, the movement of fish to new ranges is
inevitable, but the conflicts over fish stocks are not, the study says.
Governing bodies such as the one overseeing the EU’s fisheries
might negotiate with neighboring fisheries organizations to take account of old
fisheries moving out and new ones moving in. Pinsky and his co-authors suggest,
for example, that governments might allow the trading of fishing permits or
quotas across international boundaries.
“We need international agreements for the collaborative monitoring
and sharing of fisheries as they move, much as the Antarctic conservation
agreement has begun to do,” he said. The Antarctic management body known as
CCAMLR cooperates closely with neighboring fisheries managers to share
information about shared fisheries, including those that will continue to move.
The alternative to such agreements is grim, including overfishing
and conflicts over fisheries that can spill over into international tensions
over trade, borders and sovereignty.
“We have a chance to avoid conflict over fisheries that could
escalate international tensions, threaten our food supply, and reduce profit
and employment worldwide,” Pinsky said. “Avoiding fisheries conflicts and
overfishing ultimately provides more fish, more food and more jobs for
everyone.”
Study co-authors include researchers at the University of British
Columbia, Utrecht University, Cardiff University, Stockholm University and
James Cook University who are participating in the Nippon Foundation-University
of British Columbia Nereus Program.