Litcius/Paper detail

Integrating economic dynamics into ecological networks: The case of fishery sustainability

Paul Glaum, Valentin Cocco, Fernanda S. Valdovinos

2020Science Advances25 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Understanding anthropogenic impacts on ecosystems requires investigating feedback processes between ecological and economic dynamics. While network ecology has advanced our understanding of large-scale communities, it has not robustly coupled economic drivers of anthropogenic impact to ecological outcomes. Leveraging allometric trophic network models, we study such integrated economic-ecological dynamics in the case of fishery sustainability. We incorporate economic drivers of fishing effort into food-web network models, evaluating the dynamics of thousands of single-species fisheries across hundreds of simulated food webs under fixed-effort and open-access management strategies. Analyzing simulation results reveals that harvesting species with high population biomass can initially support fishery persistence but threatens long-term economic and ecological sustainability by indirectly inducing extinction cascades in non-harvested species. This dynamic is exacerbated in open-access fisheries where profit-driven growth in fishing effort increases perturbation strength. Our results demonstrate how network theory provides necessary ecological context when considering the sustainability of economically dynamic fishing effort.

Topics & Concepts

SustainabilityFishingFood webTrophic levelEcologyEcosystemFisheries managementEcological networkTrophic cascadePopulationEnvironmental scienceEnvironmental resource managementFisheryBiologySociologyDemographyMarine and fisheries researchCoral and Marine Ecosystems StudiesEvolutionary Game Theory and Cooperation
Integrating economic dynamics into ecological networks: The case of fishery sustainability | Litcius