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Winners and losers in US marine aquaculture under climate change

journal contribution
posted on 2025-11-13, 23:33 authored by CR Fong, J DeCesaro, G Clawson, M Frazier, BS Halpern, HE Froehlich
Mariculture will be important to meeting global seafood food demand in the coming decades. Yet, the threat of climate change—such as rising ocean temperatures—on mariculture performance remains uncertain. This is particularly true at small spatial scales relevant to most producers. Additionally, mariculture is often limited by regulations that impose restrictions on production, creating potential hurdles for anticipating and adapting to climate change. We focus on mariculture performance in the United States (U.S.), where state and federal policies and exposure to climate change vary substantially and likely interact. We map a current and future mariculture performance index by combining the first high resolution downscaled (0.083°) climate outputs for U.S. waters, species-specific physiological requirements, and policy restrictions. We find high current performance that will increase under warming oceans, with spatial variation that will amplify existing regional differences. Generally, performance will increase in the north and decrease in the south. While the permitting process is not intentionally climate-forward, permitted species outperformed taxon averages, yet state policies often limit production of seaweeds and finfishes, which perform well. Thus, we sit at a critical juncture where the U.S. could capitalize on its seemingly favorable environmental conditions through re-alignment of regulations to support portfolio diversification to include climate-resilient species.<p></p>

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Sub-type

  • Article

Publication title

ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH LETTERS

Volume

19

Issue

11

Article number

ARTN 114024

Pagination

10

eISSN

1748-9326

ISSN

1748-9326

Department/School

Ecology and Biodiversity

Publisher

IOP Publishing Ltd

Publication status

  • Published

Rights statement

© 2024 The Author(s). Published by IOP Publishing Ltd Original content from this work may be used under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 licence. Any further distribution of this work must maintain attribution to the author(s) and the title of the work, journal citation and DOI.

UN Sustainable Development Goals

13 Climate Action, 14 Life Below Water