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Estimating global biomass and biogeochemical cycling of marine fish with and without fishing.

Authors :
Bianchi, Daniele
Bianchi, Daniele
Carozza, David A
Galbraith, Eric D
Guiet, Jérôme
DeVries, Timothy
Bianchi, Daniele
Bianchi, Daniele
Carozza, David A
Galbraith, Eric D
Guiet, Jérôme
DeVries, Timothy
Source :
Science advances; vol 7, iss 41, eabd7554; 2375-2548
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

The biomass and biogeochemical roles of fish in the ocean are ecologically important but poorly known. Here, we use a data-constrained marine ecosystem model to provide a first-order estimate of the historical reduction of fish biomass due to fishing and the associated change in biogeochemical cycling rates. The pre-exploitation global biomass of exploited fish (10 g to 100 kg) was 3.3 ± 0.5 Gt, cycling roughly 2% of global primary production (9.4 ± 1.6 Gt year−1) and producing 10% of surface biological export. Particulate organic matter produced by exploited fish drove roughly 10% of the oxygen consumption and biological carbon storage at depth. By the 1990s, biomass and cycling rates had been reduced by nearly half, suggesting that the biogeochemical impact of fisheries has been comparable to that of anthropogenic climate change. Our results highlight the importance of developing a better mechanistic understanding of how fish alter ocean biogeochemistry.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Science advances; vol 7, iss 41, eabd7554; 2375-2548
Notes :
application/pdf, Science advances vol 7, iss 41, eabd7554 2375-2548
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1367381762
Document Type :
Electronic Resource