大西洋クロマグロ回復の隠れた要因を解明(Study reveals hidden driver for Atlantic bluefin comeback)

2026-04-23 スタンフォード大学

スタンフォード大学の研究チームは、電子タグを用いた追跡によりクロマグロの回遊行動と回復過程を詳細に解明した。太平洋クロマグロは過去に乱獲で激減したが、近年の保護措置により資源は回復傾向にある。本研究では、若齢個体が広範囲を移動しつつ成長し、海洋環境や餌資源に応じて行動を変えることが確認された。タグデータは回遊ルートや生息域の重要性を示し、持続的な漁業管理には国際的な協調と科学的根拠に基づく保全が不可欠であることを示唆する。これにより、クロマグロ資源の回復を支える新たな管理戦略の基盤が提供された。

大西洋クロマグロ回復の隠れた要因を解明(Study reveals hidden driver for Atlantic bluefin comeback)
Left: Tracks of Atlantic bluefin tuna by spatial spawning stock or origin, including the Gulf (red) and Mediterranean (blue). Right: Tracks of Atlantic bluefin tuna by country where each fish was tagged show trans-Atlantic crossings. | Block et al. 2026, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

<関連情報>

大西洋クロマグロの未来を守る Ensuring the future of Atlantic bluefin tuna

B. A. Block bblock@stanford.edu, E. A. Aalto, C. M. L. S. Pagniello, +11 , and P. Cermeño
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences  Published:April 20, 2026
DOI:https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2535185123

Significance

Here, we combine and report on three decades of Atlantic bluefin tuna (ABT) electronic tag data from 5 nations that provide fisheries-independent biological information and spatially explicit track data vital for the management of the species’ life history. Tag data, state-space modeling, and stock assignments enable estimations of fisheries area utilization, population overlap, habitat preference, and natural mortality that have improved the accuracy of management models. As a consequence of better management and stronger enforcement, there has been a large recovery in ABT, once near the brink of extinction, despite high international demand and biological and management complexity. The future of the species depends on science-based management that harnesses and supports the life history of the species to optimize yields while ensuring sustainability.

Abstract

Atlantic bluefin tuna (ABT) are a highly migratory fish that have been exploited by fishers for more than two millennia. This lucrative fishery is managed by the International Commission for Conservation of Atlantic Tunas (ICCAT), formed by 55 contracting parties. Implementation by ICCAT of an ABT recovery plan and decades of conservation efforts have led to significant progress and the species is rebounding throughout its range. Here, we combine and report on three decades of ABT electronic tag data from five nations that provide fisheries-independent biological information and spatially explicit track data vital to understanding the species’ life history. Tag data, state-space modeling, and spawning ground assignments enable estimations of fisheries area utilization, population overlap, and natural mortality that improve the accuracy of management models. We also examine the distribution of ABT fisheries impact over 70 years by assessing ICCAT catch reporting by fleet, gear type, and region. We hypothesize that, under the historical two-stock management paradigm, escapement of eastern juveniles and subadults from the Mediterranean Sea to the lower fishing mortality of the North Atlantic has contributed to the recovery of the eastern stock, with the 45°W meridian acting as an indirect conservation measure for migrating ABT in the West Atlantic. Although recent Management Strategy Evaluation modeling in ICCAT partly incorporates this migration behavior into catch composition estimates and recognizes the contribution provided by eastern migrants to western Atlantic biomass, these complex trans-Atlantic migratory behaviors need to be accounted for in future stock assessments and management. Tag data and development of genomic technology for dockside catch origin assignments can support improvements of stock assessments that will ensure the sustainability of ABT.

1401漁業及び増養殖
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