Authors
Aurore A Maureaud, Romain Frelat, Laurène Pécuchet, Nancy Shackell, Bastien Mérigot, Malin L Pinsky, Kofi Amador, Sean C Anderson, Alexander Arkhipkin, Arnaud Auber, Iça Barri, Richard J Bell, Jonathan Belmaker, Esther Beukhof, Mohamed L Camara, Renato Guevara‐Carrasco, Junghwa Choi, Helle T Christensen, Jason Conner, Luis A Cubillos, Hamet D Diadhiou, Dori Edelist, Margrete Emblemsvåg, Billy Ernst, Tracey P Fairweather, Heino O Fock, Kevin D Friedland, Camilo B Garcia, Didier Gascuel, Henrik Gislason, Menachem Goren, Jérôme Guitton, Didier Jouffre, Tarek Hattab, Manuel Hidalgo, Johannes N Kathena, Ian Knuckey, Saïkou O Kidé, Mariano Koen‐Alonso, Matt Koopman, Vladimir Kulik, Jacqueline Palacios León, Ya’arit Levitt‐Barmats, Martin Lindegren, Marcos Llope, Félix Massiot‐Granier, Hicham Masski, Matthew McLean, Beyah Meissa, Laurène Mérillet, Vesselina Mihneva, Francis KE Nunoo, Richard O'Driscoll, Cecilia A O'Leary, Elitsa Petrova, Jorge E Ramos, Wahid Refes, Esther Román‐Marcote, Helle Siegstad, Ignacio Sobrino, Jón Sólmundsson, Oren Sonin, Ingrid Spies, Petur Steingrund, Fabrice Stephenson, Nir Stern, Feriha Tserkova, Georges Tserpes, Evangelos Tzanatos, Itai Van Rijn, Paul AM Van Zwieten, Paraskevas Vasilakopoulos, Daniela V Yepsen, Philippe Ziegler, James T Thorson
Publication date
2021/1
Source
Global change biology
Volume
27
Issue
2
Pages
220-236
Description
Marine biota are redistributing at a rapid pace in response to climate change and shifting seascapes. While changes in fish populations and community structure threaten the sustainability of fisheries, our capacity to adapt by tracking and projecting marine species remains a challenge due to data discontinuities in biological observations, lack of data availability, and mismatch between data and real species distributions. To assess the extent of this challenge, we review the global status and accessibility of ongoing scientific bottom trawl surveys. In total, we gathered metadata for 283,925 samples from 95 surveys conducted regularly from 2001 to 2019. We identified that 59% of the metadata collected are not publicly available, highlighting that the availability of data is the most important challenge to assess species redistributions under global climate change. Given that the primary purpose of surveys is to provide …
Total citations
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