Coho salmon are among the species anticipated to shift northward with climate change. |
Anticipated changes in climate will push West Coast marine species from
sharks to salmon northward an average of 30 kilometers per decade,
shaking up fish communities and shifting fishing grounds, according to a
new study published in Progress in Oceanography.
The study suggests that shifting species will likely move into the
habitats of other marine life to the north, especially in the Gulf of
Alaska and Bering Sea. Some will simultaneously disappear from areas at
the southern end of their ranges, especially off Oregon and California.
"As the climate warms, the species will follow the conditions they're
adapted to," said Richard Brodeur, a NOAA Fisheries senior scientist at
the Northwest Fisheries Science Center's Newport Research Station and
coauthor of the study. "We're going to see more interactions between
species and there will be winners and losers that we cannot foresee."
The study, led by William Cheung of the University of British
Columbia, estimated changes in the distribution of 28 near-surface fish
species commonly collected by research surveys in the northeast Pacific
Ocean. The researchers used established global climate models to project
how the distribution of the fish would shift by 2050 as greenhouse
gases warm the atmosphere and, in turn, the ocean surface.
Brodeur cautioned that like any models, climate models carry
uncertainty. While they provide a glimpse of the most likely changes in
global climate, they may be less accurate when estimating more
fine-scale, local changes.
"Nothing is certain," he said, "but we think we have a picture of the most likely changes."
Some species shifts are already being documented as West Coast waters
are warming: predatory Humboldt squid from Central and South America
have invaded the West Coast of North America in recent years, albacore
have shifted to more northerly waters and eulachon have disappeared from
warming waters at the southern end of their range.
"Thinking more broadly, this re-shuffling of marine species across
the whole biological community may lead to declines in the beneficial
functions of marine and coastal ecosystems," said Tom Okey, a Pew Fellow
in Marine Conservation at the University of Victoria and a coauthor of
the study. "These declines may occur much more rapidly and in more
surprising ways than our expected changes in species alone."
The study anticipates warm-water species such as thresher sharks and
chub mackerel becoming more prominent in the Gulf of Alaska and off
British Columbia. Some predators such as sea lions and seabirds, which
rear their young in fixed rookeries or colonies, may find the fish they
usually prey on moving beyond predators' usual foraging ranges.
"If their prey moves farther north, they either have to travel
farther and expend more energy to get to them, or find something else to
eat," Brodeur said. "It's the same thing for fishermen. If it gets
warmer, the fish they depend on are going to move up north and that
means more travel time and more fuel will be needed to follow them, or
else they may need to switch to different target species. It may not
happen right away but we are likely to see that kind of a trend."
El Nino years, when tropical influences temporarily warm the eastern
Pacific, offer a preview of what to expect as the climate warms.
Shifts in marine communities may be most pronounced in high-latitude
regions such as the Gulf of Alaska and Bering Sea, which the study
identifies as "hotspots" of change. Cold-water species such as salmon
and capelin have narrower temperature preferences than warmer water
species, making them more sensitive to ocean warming and likely to
respond more quickly.
An intrusion of warm-water species into cooler areas could lead to
significant changes in marine communities and ecosystems. The diversity
of northern fish communities, now often dominated by a few very prolific
species such as walleye pollock, may increase as southern species enter
the region, leading to new food web and species interactions.
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