Fish Focus

NOAA FISHERIES RELEASES 2023 ECOSYSTEM STATUS REPORTS FOR ALASKA

NOAA Fisheries releases 2023 Ecosystem Status Reports for Alaska. NOAA Fisheries has released the 2023 Ecosystem Status Reports for the eastern Bering Sea, Aleutian Islands, and Gulf of Alaska. These synthesis reports provide current conditions and trends over time for key oceanographic, biological, and ecological indicators in three Alaska marine ecosystems.

These foundational data and information reports support federal commercial fish and crab fisheries management. Each year, scientists and fishery managers at NOAA, other U.S. federal and state agencies, academic institutions, tribes, and non-profits, contribute to the reports.

For close to three decades, fishery managers have relied on these reports to better understand how commercial fish and crab populations are being affected by changes in the marine environment.

“Warming at rates four times faster than the rest of the ocean, Alaska’s Arctic ecosystems are a bellwether for climate change. Now more than ever having ecosystem and climate-related data and information is essential to support adaptive resource management and resilient commercial, recreational and subsistence fisheries, and rural and coastal communities,” said Robert Foy, director, Alaska Fisheries Science Centre.

This year, data from these reports provided broad, contextual ecosystem information for 45 stock assessments and specifically informed 16 stock-level risk assessments.

2023 Highlights Across Alaska

Looking across the three ecosystems this year, there are several notable indicators amidst continued variability in many marine conditions.

Gulf of Alaska

Aleutian Islands

Bering Sea

A New Tool to Track Abundance Trends

This year, scientists began testing a new modelling tool. It illustrates how changes in one variable might affect another. The Dynamic Structural Equation Model allows scientists to better understand connections between different indicators and the factors that may be affecting increases and decreases in their abundance.

“We can estimate missing information, lags in indicator response to ecosystem changes, and the strength of connections between indicators,” said Elizabeth Siddon, a fisheries biologist at the Alaska Fisheries Science Centre who developed the tool.  “We are also excited about the potential for being able to use this tool to project next year conditions for some indicators.”

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