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More sustainable fisheries through better management

How do climate and land-use changes influence fish catch in lakes? That has been at the centre of a major international study which urges policymakers to increase funding for land and water management to create a more sustainable fisheries industry.

World map showing 31 lakes as part of a global study of small-scale fisheries.
GLOBAL FISH CAPTURE MAPPED: A team of international scientists from 19 countries have mapped small-scale fisheries in 31 lakes around the world and conclude that improving land and water management can lead to more sustainable fisheries.
Photo:
Natural Earth Data

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笔谤辞蹿别蝉蝉辞谤听Jeppe Kolding聽from the University of Bergen is co-author of the just published paper 鈥溾 in the journal聽Nature Communications, with Dr. Yu-Chun Kao from Michigan State University in the US as first author.

鈥淥ur studies found that decreases in fish catch could be associated with either increases or decreases of a climate or land-use driver,鈥 says Kolding about the study, which started in 2016 and brought together a team of researchers from 28 research institutes in 19 countries.

Freshwater lakes are in general the most diverse ecosystems on earth, and聽the lakes studied have very different fishery types as well as surrounding environment. This diversity allowed the team of researchers to identify the characteristics of lakes where fish catches can be vulnerable to climate and land-use changes, which again has implications for identifying vulnerable lake fisheries around the globe.

Analysing long-term data

The team analysed long-term data for 31 lakes across five continents, showing聽that fish catches can respond either positively or negatively to climate and land-use changes.

鈥淒espite their global importance to food security and livelihoods, our knowledge on how lake fisheries respond to climate and land-use changes at a global scale is limited,鈥 says Kolding.

鈥淲e found that effects of a climate or land-use driver, such as air temperature, on lake environment could be relatively consistent in directions, but consequential changes in a lake-environmental factor, such as water temperature, could result in either increases or decreases in fish catches across lakes.鈥

A need to invest in better management

The subsequent regression analysis indicates that fish catches in lakes located in areas with more access to clean water are less vulnerable to climate and land-use changes.

鈥淥ne of our recommendations from this study is that聽adequate and appropriate investments in improved land and water management, such as water quality protection and water-use efficiency, can make lake fisheries production more sustainable,鈥 says Kolding about the study, which provides advice to policymakers on action towards ,聽which can also provide additional benefits to lake fisheries and food security.

Kolding is a biologist who has long engaged with small fish, small-scale fisheries and nutrition in developing countries, and in 2018 received funding from the EU for his聽SmallFishFood听辫谤辞箩别肠迟, and he has both done research on ocean-based small-scale聽fisheries and lake-based small-scale聽fisheries.

聽is a partnership between the University of Bergen in Norway, CSIR Food Research Institute in Ghana, the German Federal Institute for Risk Assessment (BfR), the Kenya Marine and Fisheries Research Institute, the Institute of Marine Research in Norway, Wageningen University and Research in the Netherlands, the University of Ghana, NaFIRRI in Uganda, and the University of Amsterdam in the Netherlands. There are also associate partners from a number of countries聽and global NGOs.