FN Archimer Export Format PT J TI Adaptive fisheries responses may lead to climate maladaptation in the absence of access regulations BT AF Beckensteiner, Jennifer Boschetti, Fabio Thébaud, Olivier AS 1:1,2;2:3;3:4; FF 1:;2:;3:PDG-RBE-EM; C1 Univ Brest, Ifremer, CNRS, UMR 6308, AMURE, IUEM, Plouzané, France IRD, University of La Reunion, CNRS, University of New Caledonia, Ifremer, ENTROPIE c/o IUEM, Plouzané, France CSIRO, Environment, Perth, Australia Ifremer, Univ Brest, CNRS, UMR 6308, AMURE, Unité d’Economie Maritime, IUEM, Plouzané, France C2 UBO, FRANCE IRD, FRANCE CSIRO, AUSTRALIA IFREMER, FRANCE SI BREST SE IRD PDG-RBE-EM UM AMURE ENTROPIE TC 0 UR https://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/00830/94239/101618.pdf https://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/00830/94239/101619.pdf https://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/00830/94239/101620.pdf LA English DT Article DE ;Climate-change adaptation;Climate-change impacts;Ecological modelling;Environmental economics AB Adaptive fishery responses to climate-induced changes in marine fish populations may lead to fishery maladaptation. Using a stylised bio-economic model of the global fishery, we demonstrate the importance of adaptive management regimes. We show how the losses resulting from poor access regulation increase in a fishery system negatively impacted by environmental change, and demonstrate the proportional benefits provided by management strategies that control the levels and allocation of fishing effort. Indeed, under poor to nonexistent access regulation, highly adaptive actors can generate significant bio-economic losses. This might lead to foregone benefits and cascading economic and ecological losses, whereas well-designed adaptive management regimes may enable making the most of the best, and the least of the worst, climate-induced outcomes for fisheries. These findings emphasize the need for integrated assessment approaches to the impacts of climate change on fisheries, that should incorporate not only ecological responses but also the industry and management responses. PY 2023 PD MAR SO npj Ocean Sustainability SN 2731-426X PU Springer Science and Business Media LLC VL 2 IS 1 DI 10.1038/s44183-023-00010-0 ID 94239 ER EF