Article

Maladaptation to Climate Change Poses a Threat to Future Aquaculture Production

Details

Citation

Falconer L, Rector M, Yakubu SO, Filgueira R, Iversen A, Mikkelsen E, Sprague M & Ytteborg E (2026) Maladaptation to Climate Change Poses a Threat to Future Aquaculture Production. Reviews in Aquaculture, 18 (1), Art. No.: e70114. https://doi.org/10.1111/raq.70114

Abstract
As the effects of climate change become more prominent and impacts intensify, the aquaculture sector must make decisions on adaptation strategies and implement actions that will reduce risks and increase resilience. However adaptation is complex, and there can be many consequences of action or inaction. One of the major risks is maladaptation, when an action that is introduced to minimize a negative effect makes the situation worse, increases vulnerability, or has other undesirable impacts. This study considers how climate change maladaptation can occur across six defined Aquaculture Maladaptation Outcomes: (1) Increased emissions of greenhouse gases, (2) Negative impact on farmed species, (3) Negative ecological or environmental impact at local, regional or international scale, (4) Negative social impact on individuals, communities, or the global population, (5) Negative economic impact on individuals, companies, or the global food market and (6) Reduced adaptive capacity of aquaculture systems. The study further explains that maladaptation could arise through different routes, often unintentionally and could occur at all stages in the production line and associated supply chain (e.g., feed production), such as the farm-level or industry-wide scale, threatening future food production and sustainability of the sector. The distinction between adaptation and maladaptation is not always clear, changing over time and influenced by different factors, so the adaptation-maladaptation continuum is also discussed, as is the need for trade-offs. Finally, seven recommendations are outlined to help advance adaptation to climate change in aquaculture.

Keywords
adaptation; climate action; climate resilience; seafood production; sustainability

Journal
Reviews in Aquaculture: Volume 18, Issue 1

StatusPublished
FundersMedical Research Council
Publication date31/01/2026
Publication date online30/11/2025
Date accepted by journal04/11/2025
Related URLshttps://doi.org/10.1111/raq.70114
PublisherJohn Wiley & Sons, Ltd
ISSN1753-5123
eISSN1753-5131

People (4)

Dr Lynne Falconer

Dr Lynne Falconer

Senior Research Fellow, Institute of Aquaculture

Dr Megan Rector

Dr Megan Rector

Postdoctoral Research Fellow, Institute of Aquaculture

Dr Matthew Sprague

Dr Matthew Sprague

Lecturer in Nutrition, Institute of Aquaculture

Mr Suleiman Yakubu

Mr Suleiman Yakubu

Post Doctoral Research Fellow, Institute of Aquaculture

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