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Journal ArticleDOI

El Niño Southern Oscillation and tuna in the western Pacific

Patrick Lehodey, +4 more
- 14 Aug 1997 - 
- Vol. 389, Iss: 6652, pp 715-718
TLDR
This paper showed that apparent spatial shifts in the skipjack population are linked to large zonal displacements of the warm pool that occur during ENSO events, which can be used to predict (several months in advance) the region of highest skipjack abundance, within a fishing ground extending over 6,000 km along the Equator.
Abstract
Nearly 70% of the world's annual tuna harvest, currently 3.2 million tonnes, comes from the Pacific Ocean. Skipjack tuna ( Katsuwonus pelamis ) dominate the catch. Although skipjack are distributed in the surface mixed layer throughout the equatorial and subtropical Pacific, catches are highest in the western equatorial Pacific warm pool, a region characterized by low primary productivity rates1 that has the warmest surface waters of the world's oceans (Fig. 1). Assessments of tuna stocks indicate that recent western Pacific skipjack catches approaching one million tonnes annually are sustainable2. The warm pool, which is fundamental to the El Nino Southern Oscillation (ENSO) and the Earth's climate in general3,4,5, must therefore also provide a habitat capable of supporting this highly productive tuna population. Here we show that apparent spatial shifts in the skipjack population are linked to large zonal displacements of the warm pool that occur during ENSO events5,6. This relationship can be used to predict (several months in advance) the region of highest skipjack abundance, within a fishing ground extending over 6,000 km along the Equator.

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Citations
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Ecological effects of climate fluctuations.

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Vulnerability of national economies to the impacts of climate change on fisheries

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors compared the vulnerability of 132 national economies to potential climate change impacts on their capture fisheries using an indicator-based approach and found that countries in Central and Western Africa (e.g. Malawi, Guinea, Senegal, and Uganda), Peru and Colombia in north-western South America, and four tropical Asian countries (Bangladesh, Cambodia, Pakistan, and Yemen) were identified as most vulnerable.
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The Tropical Ocean‐Global Atmosphere observing system: A decade of progress

TL;DR: A major accomplishment of the recently completed Tropical Ocean-Global Atmosphere (TOGA) Program was the development of an ocean observing system to support seasonal-to-interannual climate studies.
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Effects of global climate change on marine and estuarine fishes and fisheries

TL;DR: There is a need to research the physiology and ecology of marine and estuarine fishes, particularly in the tropics where comparatively little research has been conducted, to make more accurate predictions and forge relevant solutions.
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Tracking the global footprint of fisheries

TL;DR: It is found that global patterns of fishing have surprisingly low sensitivity to short-term economic and environmental variation and a strong response to cultural and political events such as holidays and closures.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

An estimate of global primary production in the ocean from satellite radiometer data

TL;DR: In this paper, an estimate of global net primary production in the ocean has been computed from the monthly mean near-surface chlorophyll fields for 1979-1986 obtained by the Nimbus 7 CZCS radiometer.
Journal ArticleDOI

Experimental forecasts of El Niño

TL;DR: A deterministic numerical model of the coupled evolution of the tropical ocean and atmosphere was used to forecast all El Nino/Southern Oscillation (ENSO) events from 1970 to 1986 as mentioned in this paper.
Journal ArticleDOI

An estimate of new production in the equatorial Pacific

TL;DR: In this paper, two estimates of new production in the equatorial Pacific are presented and the similarity between the physically based estimate and an estimate based on measurements of primary productivity is emphasized.
Journal ArticleDOI

Mechanism of the Zonal Displacements of the Pacific Warm Pool: Implications for ENSO

TL;DR: The western equatorial Pacific warm pool is subject to strong east-west migrations on interannual time scales in phase with the Southern Oscillation Index, and the dominance of surface zonal advection in this migration is demonstrated.
Related Papers (5)
Trending Questions (1)
How does El nino southern oscillations impact marine life within the western pacific?

The paper discusses how El Niño Southern Oscillation (ENSO) events cause large zonal displacements of the warm pool in the western Pacific, which affects the distribution of skipjack tuna. However, the paper does not provide specific information on how ENSO impacts other marine life in the western Pacific.