海洋状况的季节性预报能帮助渔业管理者吗?J-SCOPE 10年的经验

IF 3.2 4区 地球科学 Q1 OCEANOGRAPHY
Samantha Siedlecki, Simone Alin, Emily Norton, Nicholas Bond, Albert Hermann, Richard Feely, Jan Newton
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引用次数: 2

摘要

在沿海水域共同发生的多种压力因素日益引起当地渔业的关注。太平洋西北部许多经济、文化或生态上重要的物种(如牡蛎、螃蟹、翼足类动物)已经直接受到海洋酸化、变暖和缺氧的影响。由于猎物种类的损失,有可能对鱼类产业造成额外的间接经济影响。由于海洋条件的强烈季节性和年际变化,预测酸化和缺氧程度的能力以及对有关物种的影响的有关指数对管理人员可能有相当大的好处。在过去的10年里,我们开发了一个季节性海洋预报系统,JISAO的生态系统季节性沿海海洋预报(J-SCOPE),用于太平洋西北沿海水域。目标是提供海洋状况的季节性(六个月)预测,这些预测是可测试的,并与渔业、受保护物种和生态系统健康的管理决策相关。这项工作的结果包括公开可用的OA变量、缺氧、温度和生态指标的季节性预测,这些预测是为涉及联邦、国际、州和部落渔业的决策者量身定制的。我们与各州和部落的管理者共同设计了J-SCOPE模型产品,现在太平洋渔业管理委员会的联邦管理者在他们的年度生态系统状况报告中收到了J-SCOPE对OA和缺氧的预测。美国和加拿大的太平洋鳕(Merluccius产品)经理现在听取了j - scope驱动的鳕分布预测。最近,新的海洋酸化指数专门针对Dungeness蟹(Metacarcinus magister)已与国家和部落的管理者共同制定。在每种情况下,该小组还调查了预测海洋状况的技能来源,以评估预测对与这些高价值渔业相关的变量、深度和季节的适用性。来自NOAA太平洋海洋环境实验室和其他区域合作伙伴的观测在整个模型开发过程中提供了对模型性能的关键验证。我们回顾了前10年的预测,以提供其成功和局限性的观点,以及季节性预测在全球范围内的潜在适用性,为灵活的管理应对快速变化的气候和海洋条件提供信息。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Can Seasonal Forecasts of Ocean Conditions Aid Fishery Managers? Experiences from 10 Years of J-SCOPE
Multiple stressors co-occurring in coastal waters are of increasing concern to local fisheries. Many economically, culturally, or ecologically important species (e.g., oysters, crabs, pteropods) in the Pacific Northwest are already directly affected by ocean acidification (OA), warming, and hypoxia. Additional indirect economic impacts on the finfish industry are possible due to losses of prey species. Because of strong seasonal and interannual variations in ocean conditions, capability for predicting degrees of acidification and hypoxia, as well as relevant indices of impact for species of interest, could be of considerable benefit to managers. Over the past 10 years, we have developed a seasonal ocean prediction system, JISAO’s Seasonal Coastal Ocean Prediction of the Ecosystem (J-SCOPE), for the coastal waters of the Pacific Northwest. The goal has been to provide seasonal (six-month) predictions of ocean conditions that are testable and relevant to management decisions regarding fisheries, protected species, and ecosystem health. The results of this work include publicly available seasonal forecasts of OA variables, hypoxia, temperature, and ecological indicators that are tailored for decision-makers involved in federal, international, state, and tribal fisheries. We codesigned J-SCOPE model products with state and tribal managers, and now federal managers at the Pacific Fishery Management Council receive J-SCOPE forecasts of OA and hypoxia within their annual Ecosystem Status Reports. US and Canadian managers of Pacific hake (Merluccius productus) are now briefed on J-SCOPE-driven forecasts of hake distribution. Most recently, new ocean acidification indices specific to Dungeness crab (Metacarcinus magister) have been co-produced with state and tribal managers. In each of these cases, the team has also investigated the sources of skill in forecasting ocean conditions to assess applicability of the forecasts to the variables, depths, and seasons relevant to these high-value fisheries. Observations from NOAA’s Pacific Marine Environmental Laboratory and other regional partners have provided critical validation of model performance throughout the model development process. We offer a retrospective look at the first 10 years of forecasting to provide perspective on its successes and limitations, and the potential global applicability of seasonal forecasting to inform flexible management responses to rapidly changing climate and ocean conditions.
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来源期刊
Oceanography
Oceanography 地学-海洋学
CiteScore
6.10
自引率
3.60%
发文量
39
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: First published in July 1988, Oceanography is the official magazine of The Oceanography Society. It contains peer-reviewed articles that chronicle all aspects of ocean science and its applications. In addition, Oceanography solicits and publishes news and information, meeting reports, hands-on laboratory exercises, career profiles, book reviews, and shorter, editor-reviewed articles that address public policy and education and how they are affected by science and technology. We encourage submission of short papers to the Breaking Waves section that describe novel approaches to multidisciplinary problems in ocean science.
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