Expanding ocean food production under climate change

被引:0
|
作者
Christopher M. Free
Reniel B. Cabral
Halley E. Froehlich
Willow Battista
Elena Ojea
Erin O’Reilly
James E. Palardy
Jorge García Molinos
Katherine J. Siegel
Ragnar Arnason
Marie Antonette Juinio-Meñez
Katharina Fabricius
Carol Turley
Steven D. Gaines
机构
[1] University of California,Bren School of Environmental Science and Management
[2] Santa Barbara,Marine Science Institute
[3] University of California,College of Science and Engineering
[4] Santa Barbara,Environmental Studies
[5] James Cook University,Department of Ecology, Evolution, and Marine Biology
[6] University of California,Oceans Program
[7] Santa Barbara,Future Oceans Lab
[8] University of California,Environmental Markets Lab
[9] Santa Barbara,Arctic Research Center
[10] Environmental Defense Fund,Graduate School of Environmental Science
[11] CIM-Universidade de Vigo,Global Station for Arctic Research, Global Institution for Collaborative Research and Education
[12] University of California,Department of Environmental Science, Policy, and Management
[13] Santa Barbara,Faculty of Economics
[14] The Pew Charitable Trusts,The Marine Science Institute, College of Science
[15] Hokkaido University,undefined
[16] Hokkaido University,undefined
[17] Hokkaido University,undefined
[18] University of California,undefined
[19] University of Iceland,undefined
[20] University of the Philippines Diliman,undefined
[21] Australian Institute of Marine Science,undefined
[22] Plymouth Marine Laboratory,undefined
来源
Nature | 2022年 / 605卷
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摘要
As the human population and demand for food grow1, the ocean will be called on to provide increasing amounts of seafood. Although fisheries reforms and advances in offshore aquaculture (hereafter ‘mariculture’) could increase production2, the true future of seafood depends on human responses to climate change3. Here we investigated whether coordinated reforms in fisheries and mariculture could increase seafood production per capita under climate change. We find that climate-adaptive fisheries reforms will be necessary but insufficient to maintain global seafood production per capita, even with aggressive reductions in greenhouse-gas emissions. However, the potential for sustainable mariculture to increase seafood per capita is vast and could increase seafood production per capita under all but the most severe emissions scenario. These increases are contingent on fisheries reforms, continued advances in feed technology and the establishment of effective mariculture governance and best practices. Furthermore, dramatically curbing emissions is essential for reducing inequities, increasing reform efficacy and mitigating risks unaccounted for in our analysis. Although climate change will challenge the ocean’s ability to meet growing food demands, the ocean could produce more food than it does currently through swift and ambitious action to reduce emissions, reform capture fisheries and expand sustainable mariculture operations.
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页码:490 / 496
页数:6
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