Effects of Climate Events on Abundance and Distribution of Major Commercial Fishes in the Beibu Gulf, South China Sea

Author:

Hong Xiaofan123ORCID,Zhang Kui12ORCID,Li Jiajun12,Xu Youwei12,Sun Mingshuai12,Wang Yuezhong12,Xu Shannan124,Cai Yancong12,Qiu Yongsong12ORCID,Chen Zuozhi124

Affiliation:

1. South China Sea Fisheries Research Institute, Chinese Academy of Fishery Sciences, Guangzhou 510300, China

2. Key Laboratory for Sustainable Utilization of Open-Sea Fishery, Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Affairs, Guangzhou 510300, China

3. College of Marine Sciences, Shanghai Ocean University, Shanghai 201306, China

4. Sanya Tropical Fisheries Research Institute, Sanya 572018, China

Abstract

Improving prediction of ecological responses to climate variability requires understanding how local fish population dynamics are impacted by climate events. The present study was conducted in the Beibu Gulf of the northwestern South China Sea where the fisheries are characterized by high ecological and commercial value. We evaluated the relationship between major commercial fish population dynamics (abundance and distribution) and climate periods, using survey data from 2006–2020. The analysis using random forest and GAM models show that climate events are not the best predictors for the variations of fish abundance, because abundance of most fish stocks decreases significantly with the year, and the increasing fishing pressure over time can better explain the overall downward trend in fishery stocks. However, environmental variables that correlate significantly with interannual variation in ONI may impact fish abundance in short terms. Our research suggests that climate events leading to higher surface seawater salinity in winter favors pelagic fishes by improving habitat availability, and higher near-surface chlorophyll-α concentration during La Niña events provides better food condition for overwintering fish. In addition, there is no clear evidence that climatic events have a significant impact on gravity center of fish distribution, whereas climate change has caused most fishes to move to cooler coastal waters in the north.

Funder

Key research and development project of Guangdong Province

Financial Fund of the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Affairs, P. R. of China “Survey of offshore and open-sea fishery resources in the South China Sea”

Central Public-Interest Scientific Institution Basal Research Fund, CAFS

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Nature and Landscape Conservation,Agricultural and Biological Sciences (miscellaneous),Ecological Modeling,Ecology

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