Abstract

Climate change impacts on fisheries will undoubtedly have socio-economic impacts on coastal communities and the seafood market. However, it is a challenge to integrate climate change information in a form that can be used efficiently by adaptation planners, policy makers and fishery managers. In this study, we frame a climate change impact assessment using a geographical perspective based on the management units of the dominant fishery, in this case, American lobster in Nova Scotia, Canada. The information considered here includes economic dependence on the fishery, population size, diversity of the fishery revenue, status of harbour infrastructure, total replacement cost of each harbour, increased relative sea level and flooding, and the vulnerability of offshore lobster to ocean warming and changes in zooplankton composition and anticipatory changes in fishery productivity across management borders. Using two ocean models to provide multi-decadal scale projections of bottom temperature, changes in offshore lobster distribution are projected to have a neutral, or positive impact on the region as a whole. However, when lobster vulnerability is combined with climate change related vulnerabilities of coastal fishing communities, it is evident that adaptation planning is needed for long-term sustainability. This impact assessment provides both a framework and information for further in-depth analyses by climate change adaptation planners and fishery managers.

Highlights

  • Coastal regions and communities have been identified as vulnerable to climate change

  • We present an analysis of coastal vulnerabilities to climate change, alongside potential responses of adjacent lobster populations given increased ocean temperatures

  • Using survey data collected in both inshore and offshore in the Gulf of Maine, lobster habitat has been shown to be increasing in both areas (Tanaka et al, 2019a), and is projected to continue to increase under the RCP8.5 scenario (Tanaka et al, 2019b)

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Summary

Introduction

Coastal regions and communities have been identified as vulnerable to climate change. The Government of Canada has recently appointed a Minister of Rural Economic Development with the primary goal of creating a Canadian Rural Economic Development Strategy. At the provincial level in Nova Scotia, a goal was set to double. Vulnerability of Lobster Fishing Communities the value of exports (relative to a 2012 baseline) from the fisheries (including aquaculture) and the agricultural sectors on a sustainable basis by 2024 (https://onens.ca/goals/goal-15fisheries-and-agriculture-exports/). The determination of this sustainability will be contingent upon accounting for the impacts of climate change on the fisheries and fishing communities

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