Reintroducing sea otters is good for the environment and the economy, and both matter

More sea otters are detrimental to fisheries income, but economic gains in other sectors outweigh these losses

Image:

Steve Halama via Unsplash

Does the thought of coming face-to-face with a predator terrify you? Wish they would all just disappear? Not so fast. Eliminating predators is one of the major ways humans damage ecosystems, since many predators act as a keystone species that hold complex food webs together

Predator removal may seem reasonable due to concerns over human or livestock safety, like in the 19th century during the removal of gray wolves from most of their territory in the United States. In recent times, there have been efforts to reintroduce or protect keystone predator populations, which has benefited ecosystem health

But this has not felt beneficial to everyone. Some local communities and industries have gotten used to the absence of a predator and feel predator recovery would have a negative impact on them. For example, some Indigenous communities and invertebrate fisheries in the North Pacific do not want the return of a keystone predator — the sea otter — because the otters eat the shellfish that these communities rely on for food. The problem is we do not have a clear understanding of how recovering keystone predators affect local economies and human populations (either positively or negatively). 

In a recent study published in Science, a team of researchers led by Edward Gregr of the University of British Columbia developed a way to address this question. They used a predictive model to measure the monetary value of ecosystem services (any positive benefit an ecosystem provides) when a keystone predator is present or absent from the habitat. They also developed a method to measure the uncertainty in their predictions, which has often times been an ignored feature in ecological models. The researchers used the well-studied ecosystem off the Canadian coast in the North Pacific as a model – the place where sea otters were reintroduced.

In the past, sea otters ranged across the North Pacific Rim, up to the top of North America and west into Russia. During the 18th and 19th century, sea otters were hunted for their fur which led to a large decrease in their habitat range and near-complete extinction. Though they have since recovered in some areas of the North Pacific Rim, they have not fully returned to their original habitat range. The researchers used these areas to compare the same type of ecosystem from different sites, some containing sea otters for over 40 years and some where sea otters have remained absent since their local extinction.

They compared these ecosystems by measuring the total biomass (total mass of living things in an area) of different types of organisms in the ecosystem. Biomass measurements help marine ecologists understand how well an ecosystem is functioning, as well which species in the ecosystem have healthy populations and which do not. The researchers then fed the biomass data into a trophic model, which makes predictions about how biomass is distributed at different levels of the food chain (e.g. prey and predators). They found that the presence of sea otters increases total ecosystem biomass by 37%. That means there is predicted to be more plants and animals (by mass) in the habitat with sea otters present as active predators.

They then used their biomass data alongside invertebrate catch data from 1983 to 2008 from Fisheries and Oceans Canada to assess economic gains and losses that would occur when sea otters were present and absent in the habitat based on four different ecosystem services: invertebrate catch, fish catch, ecotourism, and carbon sequestration.

The researchers’ calculations agreed with the invertebrate fisheries complaints, showing the invertebrate fisheries could suffer an economic loss of about 7 million Canadian dollars (CAD) a year (approximately $5.3 million USD) when sea otters were present. However, this economic loss was offset by economic gains in the three other ecosystem services. 

In their calculations, tourism gained revenue based on surveys that estimated how much tourists were willing to pay for a nature tour if they had a very high chance of seeing a sea otter. The survey found that people's willingness-to-pay would increase by an average of $121 CAD per visitor ($91 USD) if otters were present, resulting in an overall estimated gain of $42 million CAD ($32 million USD) annually from the presence of sea otters.

The other two ecosystem services, carbon sequestration and fish catch, also showed a predicted increase in annual economic gains with the presence of sea otters, mainly due to the sea otter’s role in increasing biomass of other species in the ecosystem. 

The sea otter ecosystem is largely made up of thick kelp forests. Within these forests, sea otters prey on sea urchins, which graze heavily on kelp. If sea otters are not present, then urchin populations boom, which leads to overgrazing — killing all the kelp — and creating a wasteland known as an urchin barren

a person's hand holding a sea urchin

Sea urchin populations are directly controlled by hungry sea otters

Photo by Portuguese Gravity on Unsplash 

So, sea otters indirectly maintain healthy kelp populations, which leads to more carbon being locked away in kelp tissue. This is economically beneficial because it mitigates carbon expenses from carbon taxes and also assists in reducing economic impact caused by climate change.

Using carbon pricing from the European Union, the researchers predicted that sea otters would lead to an economic gain of $2.2 million CAD ($1.7 million USD) annually. Having a healthy kelp forest also increases habitat for fish, and therefore fish biomass. This can lead to additional fish catch and was predicted to provide an economic gain of $9.4 million CAD ($7.1 million USD) annually. Collectively, there was a predicted net gain of $46.3 million CAD ($35 million USD) across the four tested ecosystem services. So overall it appears that sea otters benefit the economy.

Hopefully this new modeling technique will be applied across many ecosystems to help guide conservation and public policy. But local communities can only obtain these economic gains from ecosystem services if they have access to them. For example,  local Indigenous people may experience economic losses more intensely than other communities because the economic benefits, like tourism, are not spread equally across all economic sectors. Their needs and wishes must be considered in sea otter reintroduction plans.

It may seem odd to think about organisms in terms of monetary value, because to many of us, they mean much more. The economic argument this study makes is not to replace the ecological argument for predator reintroduction, but rather adds a different perspective. Making an economic argument alongside an ecological one can help capture a more diverse audience and gain favor for the reintroduction of predators by those who are not moved by the ecological argument alone. Predator reintroduction and protection should continue to gain support when scientists show that the ecosystem and human populations will benefit from the effort.

Peer Commentary

Feedback and follow-up from other members of our community

A very interesting article. The first thing that came to my mind when I read this article is E F Schumacher’s small is beautiful: a study of economics as if people mattered or rather, in this case, the study of ecology as if people and economy mattered. If this is not a daft question, reintroducing would mean sea otters shared the niche at an earlier time. I wonder how the sea otters come about to live there, in the first instance and what caused them to leave: this might be important if the Indigenous communities complain that sea otters consume the shellfish at an uncontrollable level in the past. I am curious how the policymakers will mitigate this challenge. 

Matthew Vandermeulen

Thank you for the comment!

So the sea otters have lived and evolved there for a long time but were driven to near extinction during the fur trade. So their reduced populations were human driven. The people that live there have gotten used to the sea otters not being around since the fur trade, and therefore, do not want to have to compete with them for food like they used to.

But they did in the past. There was a time where they managed to sustain their way of living along side the sea otters. Perhaps there is a way to help return to the more “natural” state, and find a way for everyone to benefit. I agree that the policy makers should be thinking about this because the indigenous people’s needs are important and must be considered. It is a tough challenge to work out but I hope they find a way.

While the article’s idea of estimating the economic consequences of a recovering predator, the model presented in the article had quite a few uncertainties and data quality issues.

It should be noted that what the article presents as “supplemented catch” is not based on actual measurements or catch data on commercially valuable finfish. Unlike the data on “direct catch”(invertebrates and lingcod), the economic value for the finfish was estimated using biomass. They assumed that part of the biomass not consumed by the species in their model would enter the food chain, eventually being part of commercially valuable fish species that could potentially be harvested and sold.

So, the benefit of 9.4 million Canadian dollars (CA$) per year that these areas could experience is rather tenuous. Moreover, the estimated annual loss to invertebrate fisheries of 7.3 million CA$ is likely bigger than stated (around 8 million CA$). This is because the data for lingcod, a fish whose abundance is expected to increase when otters are present, was included in the “invertebrate fisheries” data (or more precisely, the direct catch data from existing fisheries).

I hope future models improve upon this one, as more data is collected or becomes available from fisheries and other touristic spots.

Matthew Vandermeulen

Thank you for your response and provoking further thought!

They do quantify their uncertainty in ways that haven’t been done before, however, I do agree that there are some issues with the data. I agree that it is tough to know how biomass will directly convert into how much fish will get caught for profit.

To further expand on some issues, there are also other values that humans hold that were not measured in this study. I hope in future models they try and include more ecosystem services to capture more of the impacts that reintroducing predators can do (both positively and negatively).

Still, this study makes a strong leap forward to start approaching the question as to whether or not reintroducing predators is beneficial to the economy and local people with a predictive model. These models will only improve with time.

Great article Matthew Vandermeulen, while reading this I thought about this research done by researchers in Aberdeen, Scotland. They sent questionnaires to invasive species management professionals as well as members of the public in Ontario, Canada, and Aberdeen, Scotland. They found that both groups perceived nonnative and harmful species are in need of managing, suggesting the reasoning from the public and professionals were not too far off from one another. I wonder if similar communications can take place with the local indigenous groups before further reintroductions of sea otters occur. Perceptions might actually be more in line with researchers and conservationists if fellow local groups are involved in the process. 

Very interesting research, I took a dive into the social science study that you mention about indigenous groups and their perspectives on otter reintroduction. It’s great to see more academics joining forces with stakeholder groups to design research questions in an inclusive way. This is something that university researchers could certainly do more of, and I think this study is a good example of how to approach it. In particular, the fact that different indigenous groups were included and expressed varying concerns about the otter reintroduction is a good example of why researchers should be as inclusive as possible when working with different stakeholders, and not assume that any group is homogeneous.

As far as the research methods go, I wish they would have included demographic information for survey respondents. They state that they used “convenience sampling” and attempted to obtain a representative sample across age and gender, but don’t include the breakdown data for this. They mention that there is a statistically significant gender difference in attitudes toward otters in one indigenous group, and I wish they would have followed up with more qualitative data here- perhaps one gender would be disproportionately impacted, and this is important to assess further.

I’m glad the researchers mention the important context of shifting baselines in their discussion, as this most certainly plays a role in the way that the communities perceive the impact of otters on shellfish availability.