Published October 27, 2022 | Version v1
Dataset Open

Data for: Social-ecological vulnerability of fishing communities to climate change: a U.S. West Coast case study

  • 1. University of Washington
  • 2. Northwest Fisheries Science Center
  • 3. Southwest Fisheries Science Center
  • 4. University of California, Santa Cruz

Description

Climate change is already impacting coastal communities, and ongoing and future shifts in fisheries species productivity from climate change have implications for the livelihoods and cultures of coastal communities. Harvested marine species in the California Current Large Marine Ecosystem support U.S. West Coast communities economically, socially, and culturally. Ecological vulnerability assessments exist for individual species in the California Current but ecological and human vulnerability are linked and vulnerability is expected to vary by community. Here, we present automatable, reproducible methods for assessing the vulnerability of U.S. West Coast fishing-dependent communities to climate change within a social-ecological vulnerability framework. We first assessed the ecological risk of marine resources, on which fishing communities rely, to 50 years of climate change projections. We then combined this with the adaptive capacity of fishing communities, based on social indicators, to assess the potential ability of communities to cope with future changes. Specific communities (particularly in Washington state) were determined to be at risk to climate change mainly due to economic reliance on at risk marine fisheries species, like salmon, hake, or sea urchins. But, due to higher social adaptive capacity, these communities were often not found to be the most vulnerable overall. Conversely, certain communities that were not the most at risk, ecologically and economically, ranked in the category of highly vulnerable communities due to low adaptive capacity based on social indicators (particularly in Southern California). Certain communities were both ecologically at risk due to catch composition and socially vulnerable (low adaptive capacity) leading to the highest tier of vulnerability. The integration of climatic, ecological, economic, and societal data reveals that factors underlying vulnerability are variable across fishing communities on the U.S West Coast, and suggests the need to develop a variety of well-aligned strategies to adapt to the ecological impacts of climate change.

Notes

Funding provided by: Lenfest Ocean Program*
Crossref Funder Registry ID:
Award Number:

Files

2030-2060_climatefactoroverlap.zip

Files (546.3 kB)

Name Size Download all
md5:1a8e3758560124b1bb2dc7782eab63de
236.7 kB Download
md5:a51d14d2362acb2525519489a774669d
49.6 kB Preview Download
md5:d78e0bb722f09688cd66a2b13c47a800
93.4 kB Preview Download
md5:3009102354c8b5bf54209fda286f150c
49.6 kB Preview Download
md5:77260ebfcd844750f74a4be79be7e113
4.2 kB Preview Download
md5:eb5486bca0305f3e9d1ca5a4083a05d0
32.1 kB Preview Download
md5:90ea799d5c3a96b76c85e495adcffd7f
20.7 kB Preview Download
md5:af51f3354a0e04106397dda1e8b019b3
44.2 kB Preview Download
md5:c132af2eb0e014926f746e6a5a35cd91
4.0 kB Preview Download
md5:72738aaa4ee098706beba4cb05d22371
11.9 kB Preview Download

Additional details