4.8 Article

Direct and indirect effects of heatwaves on a coral reef fishery

Journal

GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY
Volume 27, Issue 6, Pages 1214-1225

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/gcb.15472

Keywords

Bayesian modelling; catchability; climate change; coral bleaching; coral reef fishery; coral trout; heatwave

Funding

  1. Parks Australia
  2. Ian Potter Foundation
  3. Australian Research Council [DE160101207]

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Marine heatwaves are increasing in frequency and intensity, impacting coral reef fisheries indirectly through habitat degradation. A study found that the 2016 heatwave had both direct and indirect effects on the Great Barrier Reef's largest reef fishery, with temperature affecting fish catch rates and biomass. The research highlighted the potential large effect of heatwaves on catch rates of reef fishes, independent of changes in reef habitats.
Marine heatwaves are increasing in frequency and intensity, and indirectly impacting coral reef fisheries through bleaching-induced degradation of live coral habitats. Marine heatwaves also affect fish metabolism and catchability, but such direct effects of elevated temperatures on reef fisheries are largely unknown. We investigated direct and indirect effects of the devastating 2016 marine heatwave on the largest reef fishery operating along the Great Barrier Reef (GBR). We used a combination of fishery-independent underwater census data on coral trout biomass (Plectropomus and Variola spp.) and catch-per-unit-effort (CPUE) data from the commercial fishery to evaluate changes in the fishery resulting from the 2016 heatwave. The heatwave caused widespread, yet locally patchy, declines in coral cover, but we observed little effect of local coral loss on coral trout biomass. Instead, a pattern of decreasing biomass at northern sites and stable or increasing biomass at southern sites suggested a direct response of populations to the heatwave. Analysis of the fishery-independent data and CPUE found that in-water coral trout biomass estimates were positively related to CPUE, and that coral trout catch rates increased with warmer temperatures. Temperature effects on catch rates were consistent with the thermal affinities of the multiple species contributing to this fishery. Scaling-up the effect of temperature on coral trout catch rates across the region suggests that GBR-wide catches were 18% higher for a given level of effort during the heatwave year relative to catch rates under the mean temperatures in the preceding 6 years. These results highlight a potentially large effect of heatwaves on catch rates of reef fishes, independent of changes in reef habitats, that can add substantial uncertainty to estimates of stock trends inferred from fishery-dependent (CPUE) data. Overestimation of CPUE could initiate declines in reef fisheries that are currently fully exploited, and threaten sustainable management of reef stocks.

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