Weaving science and traditional knowledge: Toward sustainable solutions for ocean management
Marine Policy,
Journal Year:
2025,
Volume and Issue:
174, P. 106591 - 106591
Published: Jan. 30, 2025
Language: Английский
Making ocean climate effects studies matter to society
ICES Journal of Marine Science,
Journal Year:
2025,
Volume and Issue:
82(1)
Published: Jan. 1, 2025
Abstract
The
5th
International
Conference
on
the
Effects
of
Climate
Change
World’s
Ocean
(ECCWO5)
was
held
from
April
17
to
21,
2023,
in
Bergen,
Norway.
Some
seven
hundred
ocean
experts
around
world
gathered
online
and
under
sunny
blue
sky
at
Bryggen,
a
historic
waterfront
harbor.
ECCWO
conference
series
initiated
2008,
aiming
better
understand
impacts
climate
change
ecosystems,
services
they
provide,
people,
businesses,
communities
that
depend
them.
PICES,
ICES,
IOC,
FAO
were
major
sponsors
organizers
this
event
with
Institute
Marine
Research,
Norway,
as
local
host.
outcomes
symposium
highlighted
importance
tipping
points
fact
effects
habitat-building
species
are
dramatic
impacted
by
marine
heat
waves.
A
robust
adaptive
ecosystem
approach
fisheries
management
is
recommended,
low-emission
fishing
should
be
implemented
broadly.
deoxygenation
need
more
research.
impact
assessments
routinely
performed
for
key
components.
There
needs
focus
social-ecological
approaches
effective
stakeholder
engagement.
We
encourage
work
across
boundaries
disciplines
geography
ensure
rapid
development
uptake
good
practices
science-based
advice
so
can
adopted
aquaculture
industry.
has
contributed
building
maintaining
research
community
centered
will
important
moving
forward.
Language: Английский
Navigating concepts of social-ecological resilience in marine fisheries under climate change: shared challenges and recommendations from the northeast United States
ICES Journal of Marine Science,
Journal Year:
2023,
Volume and Issue:
80(9), P. 2266 - 2279
Published: Oct. 9, 2023
Abstract
Climate
change
is
increasingly
impacting
marine
fisheries
worldwide.
Concurrently,
scientific
interest
has
grown
to
understand
how
these
systems
can
cope
and
adapt,
with
research
shifting
from
examining
vulnerability
assessing
risks
focusing
on
determining
operationalizing
resilience.
As
fisheries-climate-resilience
researchers
practitioners
navigating
a
sea
of
frameworks,
toolkits,
strategies,
policy
goals,
management
desires,
we
take
stock
ask:
what
does
resilience
mean
us?
Drawing
our
experiences
in
the
northeast
United
States,
discuss
challenges
ambiguity
encounter
concepts
social-ecological
explore
implications
for
implementation.
We
bring
together
perspectives
various
approaches
resilience,
highlighting
shared
unique
face.
outline
three
key
considerations
as
move
forward
practice:
(1)
need
greater
transparency
reflexivity
among
regarding
they
frame
approach
resilience;
(2)
value
increasing
coordination
communication
groups
working
topics;
(3)
use
co-developed
co-produced
strategies.
urge
centring
communities
discussions
explicitly
consider
interacts
equity
outcomes.
Language: Английский