Global study shows demersal fishing affects ocean floor carbon storage
Scientists are growing increasingly concerned about the impact demersal fishing is having on climate change and the preservation of organic carbon stored in the seabed.
According to a new study, co-authored Dr Marija Sciberras, an Associate Professor at The Lyell Centre, a Global Research Institute for earth and marine sciences at Heriot-Watt University, newly deposited organic matter on the seabed was significantly reduced due to seafloor fishing activities, suggesting that, in the short term, trawling may accelerate the process that turns organic carbon to CO2.
The study emphasises the necessity for tailored management approaches if seabed carbon is to be protected effectively.
The international study published today (8 August) in respected journal Fish and Fisheries, analysed the findings of 71 independent studies to create a global database that harmonises existing knowledge to explore the complex relationship between demersal fishing and seabed carbon.
The globally relevant research contributes valuable insights and impact estimates, which are essential for informing decision-making and the formulation of regulatory measures aimed at minimising the adverse effects of demersal fishing on marine environments.
Dr Sciberras said: “Seafloor organic carbon plays a key role in carbon sequestration and storage, and the impact from fishing disturbance was found to vary significantly with local hydrodynamics and environmental conditions such as primary productivity.
“It is important to understand that the effects of demersal fishing on carbon are not the same everywhere. The study emphasises the necessity for tailored management approaches if seabed carbon is to be protected effectively.”
The long-term implications on seabed carbon sequestration and storage processes, particularly the disturbance of older carbon deeper than 2 cm (including refractory and semi-labile carbon), remain uncertain, as the overall effect on total organic carbon content was more variable among regions, highlighting a key knowledge gap.
The full study can be read on the Fish and Fisheries website. The database for the meta-analysis is also available at this link.
Dr Sciberras has been funded by the Children’s Investment Fund Foundation to undertake further research on this topic which is considered to be globally relevant.