4.8 Article

Global assessment of marine and freshwater recreational fish reveals mismatch in climate change vulnerability and conservation effort

Journal

GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY
Volume 27, Issue 19, Pages 4799-4824

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/gcb.15768

Keywords

climate change; conservation planning; diadromous fish; game fish; socioeconomic value; sport fish; trait-based assessment

Funding

  1. Fonds de Recherche du Quebec - Nature et Technologies [256972]

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Recreational fisheries play a vital role in the social, cultural, and economic well-being of coastal and riparian regions worldwide, but climate change poses a threat to their sustainability. Around 25% of fish species targeted for recreational fishing are vulnerable to climate change, with mismatches found between conservation efforts and vulnerability levels.
Recreational fisheries contribute substantially to the sociocultural and economic well-being of coastal and riparian regions worldwide, but climate change threatens their sustainability. Fishery managers require information on how climate change will impact key recreational species; however, the absence of a global assessment hinders both directed and widespread conservation efforts. In this study, we present the first global climate change vulnerability assessment of recreationally targeted fish species from marine and freshwater environments (including diadromous fishes). We use climate change projections and data on species' physiological and ecological traits to quantify and map global climate vulnerability and analyze these patterns alongside the indices of socioeconomic value and conservation effort to determine where efforts are sufficient and where they might fall short. We found that over 20% of recreationally targeted fishes are vulnerable to climate change under a high emission scenario. Overall, marine fishes had the highest number of vulnerable species, concentrated in regions with sensitive habitat types (e.g., coral reefs). However, freshwater fishes had higher proportions of species at risk from climate change, with concentrations in northern Europe, Australia, and southern Africa. Mismatches in conservation effort and vulnerability were found within all regions and life-history groups. A key pattern was that current conservation effort focused primarily on marine fishes of high socioeconomic value rather than on the freshwater and diadromous fishes that were predicted to be proportionately more vulnerable. While several marine regions were notably lacking in protection (e.g., Caribbean Sea, Banda Sea), only 19% of vulnerable marine species were without conservation effort. By contrast, 72% of freshwater fishes and 33% of diadromous fishes had no measures in place, despite their high vulnerability and cultural value. The spatial and taxonomic analyses presented here provide guidance for the future conservation and management of recreational fisheries as climate change progresses.

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