4.7 Article

Marine heatwave challenges solutions to human-wildlife conflict

Journal

Publisher

ROYAL SOC
DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2021.1607

Keywords

trade-offs; dynamic ocean management; Dungeness crab; whale bycatch; marine heatwave

Funding

  1. US National Marine Fisheries Service Protected Resources Division, Western Regional Office, Office of Law Enforcement and California Current Integrated Ecosystem Assessment programme
  2. National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship Programme [DGE1762114]

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This study examines how the 2014-2016 Northeast Pacific marine heatwave impacted the management of large whale entanglements in the most lucrative fishery on the U.S. west coast, demonstrating how extreme climate events can weaken management strategies and shift outcomes from near win-win to clear win-lose. While some actions were more cost-effective, there was no perfect strategy to mitigate the severity of these trade-offs.
Despite the increasing frequency and magnitude of extreme climate events, little is known about how their impacts flow through social and ecological systems or whether management actions can dampen deleterious effects. We examined how the record 2014-2016 Northeast Pacific marine heatwave influenced trade-offs in managing conflict between conservation goals and human activities using a case study on large whale entanglements in the U.S. west coast's most lucrative fishery (the Dungeness crab fishery). We showed that this extreme climate event diminished the power of multiple management strategies to resolve trade-offs between entanglement risk and fishery revenue, transforming near win-win to clear win-lose outcomes (for whales and fishers, respectively). While some actions were more cost-effective than others, there was no silver-bullet strategy to reduce the severity of these trade-offs. Our study highlights how extreme climate events can exacerbate human-wildlife conflict, and emphasizes the need for innovative management and policy interventions that provide ecologically and socially sustainable solutions in an era of rapid environmental change.

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