Cline and colleagues analysed spatiotemporal datasets covering 5000 km of popular trout rivers from 1983 to 2017, finding that fishing pressure was four times higher in cold-water sections of rivers than adjacent cool-water sections of rivers, with fisher spending in cold-water sections generating US$500,000 km−1 year−1 and cool-water sections generating US$60,000 km−1 year−1. Overall, 17% and 35% of the current cold-water habitats are projected to be warmer than 18 °C (the threshold for trout thermal extremes) by 2040 and 2080, respectively, with some river sections possibly experiencing habitat losses in excess of 80% by 2080. The combined effects of cold-water habitat loss and increased frequency and severity of drought on fishing pressure could result in 64% declines in fishing river sections by 2040 and 76% declines by 2080. The cumulative impacts of these environmental changes in fishing spending across these rivers could put a total of US$103 million year−1 and US$192 million year−1 at risk by 2040 and 2080, respectively.
Source: Ecology - nature.com