Cod, herring and haddock could
migrate away from Scotland's west coast waters because of warming sea
temperatures, according to researchers. Scientists at the Scottish Association
for Marine Science (Sams) predict the cold water species will vanish from the
west coast by the year 2100.
The researchers suggest the fish
are already nearing "edge of their temperature tolerance range".
However, they add that global
warming will see other species replace them.
Cod, herring and haddock are
commercially important species to Scotland.
The researchers at Sams, which is
near Oban and part of the University of the Highlands and Islands, warn that
climate change could lead to the fish moving away to colder waters further
north.
'Sustainable fisheries'
But over the forthcoming decades
these species would "gradually be replaced by more abundant
communities" of saithe, hake and whiting, the scientists said.
They said that from 1985 to 2013
the population of saithe and hake had increased four-fold off Scotland's west
coast.
Sams research has been published
in the journal Scientific Reports.
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