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Twenty-five emerging questions when detecting, understanding, and predicting future fish distributions in a changing climate.

Authors :
Kressler MM
Hunt GL
Stroh AK
Pinnegar JK
Mcdowell J
Watson JW
Gomes MP
Skóra ME
Fenton S
Nash RDM
Vieira R
Rincón-Díaz MP
Source :
Journal of fish biology [J Fish Biol] 2024 Aug; Vol. 105 (2), pp. 472-481.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

The 2023 Annual Symposium of the Fisheries Society of the British Isles hosted opportunities for researchers, scientists, and policy makers to reflect on the state of art of predicting fish distributions and consider the implications to the marine and aquatic environments of a changing climate. The outcome of one special interest group at the Symposium was a collection of questions, organized under five themes, which begin to capture the state of the field and identify priorities for research and management over the coming years. The five themes were Physiology, Mechanisms, Detect and Measure, Manage, and Wider Ecosystems. The questions, 25 of them, addressed concepts which remain poorly understood, are data deficient, and/or are likely to be impacted in measurable or profound ways by climate change. Moving from the first to the last theme, the questions expanded in the scope of their considerations, from specific processes within the individual to ecosystem-wide impacts, but no one question is bigger than any other: each is important in detecting, understanding, and predicting fish distributions, and each will be impacted by an aspect of climate change. In this way, our questions, particularly those concerning unknown mechanisms and data deficiencies, aimed to offer a guide to other researchers, managers, and policy makers in the prioritization of future work as a changing climate is expected to have complex and disperse impacts on fish populations and distributions that will require a coordinated effort to address.<br /> (© 2024 Fisheries Society of the British Isles.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1095-8649
Volume :
105
Issue :
2
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Journal of fish biology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
39158101
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/jfb.15895