Socioeconomic resilience to climatic extremes in a freshwater fishery

Author:

Cline Timothy J.1ORCID,Muhlfeld Clint C.12ORCID,Kovach Ryan3,Al-Chokhachy Robert4ORCID,Schmetterling David3,Whited Diane2ORCID,Lynch Abigail J.5ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Northern Rocky Mountain Science Center, U.S. Geological Survey, West Glacier, MT, USA.

2. Flathead Lake Biological Station, University of Montana, Polson, MT, USA.

3. Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks, Missoula, MT, USA.

4. U.S. Geological Survey, Northern Rocky Mountain Science Center, Bozeman, MT, USA.

5. National Climate Adaptation Science Center, U.S. Geological Survey, Reston, VA, USA.

Abstract

Heterogeneity is a central feature of ecosystem resilience, but how this translates to socioeconomic resilience depends on people’s ability to track shifting resources in space and time. Here, we quantify how climatic extremes have influenced how people (fishers) track economically valuable ecosystem services (fishing opportunities) across a range of spatial scales in rivers of the northern Rocky Mountains, USA, over the past three decades. Fishers opportunistically shifted from drought-sensitive to drought-resistant rivers during periods of low streamflows and warm temperatures. This adaptive behavior stabilized fishing pressure and expenditures by a factor of 2.6 at the scale of the regional fishery (i.e., portfolio effect). However, future warming is predicted to homogenize habitat options that enable adaptive behavior by fishers, putting ~30% of current spending at risk across the region. Maintaining a diverse portfolio of fishing opportunities that enable people to exploit shifting resources provides an important resilience mechanism for mitigating the socioeconomic impacts of climate change on fisheries.

Publisher

American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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