Seeking more than one species stabilizes fishing income

September 28, 2017

Lauren Frisch
907-474-5350

Commercial fishermen in Alaska who target a greater diversity of species have more stable incomes than fishermen who target one species, but diversifying isn鈥檛 easy, according to a study published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

Anne Beaudreau photo. Commercial fishing boats in Homer.
Anne Beaudreau photo. Commercial fishing boats in Homer.


For people who make a living by harvesting natural resources, income volatility is a persistent threat. Crops could fail. Fisheries could collapse. Forests could burn. These and other factors 鈥 including changing management regulations and practices 鈥 can lower harvests, which depresses income for farmers, fishers and timber harvesters. But the ways that these forces interact to impact income have been difficult to track, especially at the level of the individual worker.

A team of researchers from the 海角论坛, University of Washington, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration and the Alaska Department of Fish and Game studied about 30 years of income and permit data from individual commercial fishermen in Alaska to learn how diversification affects income stability.

Diversification can help reduce risk and uncertainty for fishermen. In any given year, a fisherman with multiple fishing permits has a number of options.

鈥淚f you鈥檙e fishing for species whose numbers fluctuate a lot, it鈥檚 good to diversify because maybe when one of your target species is low in numbers, another will have higher abundance that year,鈥 said Anne Beaudreau, a professor at the UAF College of Fisheries and Ocean Sciences. 鈥淲hen you diversify, you always have options.鈥

鈥淥ne option for diversification is to target different species or fish with different permits, as we see in this study with commercial fishermen,鈥 Beaudreau said. 鈥淏ut in a separate study, we found that charter fishermen are fishing for a diversity of species and targeting different areas. There are a number of ways to be flexible and make this approach work.鈥

Although this research shows that diversification is a safer bet for Alaska鈥檚 commercial fishermen, about 80 percent of fishermen currently hold only one fishing permit. Certain barriers to entry make it challenging for fishermen to diversify. For some species, there is a limit to the number of permits that can be purchased, and these competitive permits can cost hundreds of thousands of dollars.

鈥淲e do not know which factors 鈥 including fishing costs, natural forces, market demand and management policies 鈥 have made the majority of individual fishers specialize despite high income variability,鈥 said University of Washington professor Eric Ward. 鈥淏ut additional research may, in time, help scientists and policymakers come up with practices that can reduce income variability for fishers and keep fishery harvests sustainable.鈥

The project was spearheaded by Sean Anderson and Eric Ward at the University of Washington. UAF College of Fisheries and Ocean Sciences faculty members Beaudreau and Milo Adkison and graduate students Jordan Watson and Ben Williams participated. The research was funded by the National Center for Ecological Analysis and Synthesis, Exxon Valdez Oil Spill Trustee Council, David H. Smith Conservation Research Fellowship Program and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.

Learn more about the project from the , or read this paper in the