2019
DOI: 10.1111/gcb.14630
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Large‐scale distribution of tuna species in a warming ocean

Abstract: Tuna are globally distributed species of major commercial importance and some tuna species are a major source of protein in many countries. Tuna are characterized by dynamic distribution patterns that respond to climate variability and long‐term change. Here, we investigated the effect of environmental conditions on the worldwide distribution and relative abundance of six tuna species between 1958 and 2004 and estimated the expected end‐of‐the‐century changes based on a high‐greenhouse gas concentration scenar… Show more

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Cited by 100 publications
(90 citation statements)
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References 85 publications
(129 reference statements)
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“…However, we did not see a clear northward trend from the equator, suggesting other factors are involved. Indeed, the scale of the habitat spatial shift observed by Erauskin‐Extramiana et al () is smaller than the one of the fleet during the study period, reaffirming that other variables (e.g. management or technological variables) are also playing a role in the distribution of the fishery.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 58%
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“…However, we did not see a clear northward trend from the equator, suggesting other factors are involved. Indeed, the scale of the habitat spatial shift observed by Erauskin‐Extramiana et al () is smaller than the one of the fleet during the study period, reaffirming that other variables (e.g. management or technological variables) are also playing a role in the distribution of the fishery.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 58%
“…In addition to temperature, other environmental conditions might be influencing the spatial distribution of the fleet, for example upwelling systems in the study area that are expected to decline with climate change with unknown consequences to fishing communities (Sylla, Mignot, Capet, & Gaye, ). If we link the response of the fleet to what is being observed on tropical tuna species, according to Erauskin‐Extramiana et al (), tuna habitat distribution limits are already shifting poleward (on average, 6.5 km per decade in the northern hemisphere and 5.5 km per decade in the southern hemisphere). It is thus consistent to see a southward movement of the fleet over time partially explained by climate change as a response of an ecological shift.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Predicted changes in ocean productivity have been used to estimate proportional changes of fish catch under CC (Lehodey et al, 2006;Cheung et al, 2010Cheung et al, , 2012Blanchard et al, 2012;Arrizabalaga et al, 2015;Errauskin-Extramiana et al, 2019; FIGURE 6 | Performance of the North Atlantic albacore fishery represented with median values of indicators of sustainability (pGreen = probability of being in the green quadrant of the Kobe plot), safety (probability of biomass staying above Blim), catch and stability (Mean Annual Proportional change of TAC). A single probabilistic estimate (median) is used to illustrate fisheries performance of sustainability, safety, catch and variability across OMs.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…How CC will affect tunas in general, and North Atlantic albacore in particular, is being investigated (Dufour et al, 2010;Dueri et al, 2014;Arrizabalaga et al, 2015;Lehodey et al, 2015;Chust et al, 2019;Errauskin-Extramiana et al, 2019) and given the long life-span of albacore (compared to other tuna stocks) it is crucial to evaluate the combined influences of fishing, environmental variability and CC on this species (Dragon et al, 2015). Here, we build a series of exploratory scenarios to characterize climate impacts on North Atlantic albacore to evaluate if the HCR adopted for this stock would still be an adequate tool for achieving sustainability goals and for maintaining fisheries performance under CC.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%