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Predicting Future Oceans

Sustainability of Ocean and Human Systems Amidst Global Environmental Change

Paperback Engels 2019 9780128179451
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Samenvatting

Predicting Future Oceans: Sustainability of Ocean and Human Systems Amidst Global Environmental Change provides a synthesis of our knowledge of the future state of the oceans. The editors undertake the challenge of integrating diverse perspectives—from oceanography to anthropology—to exhibit the changes in ecological conditions and their socioeconomic implications. Each contributing author provides a novel perspective, with the book as a whole collating scholarly understandings of future oceans and coastal communities across the world. The diverse perspectives, syntheses and state-of-the-art natural and social sciences contributions are led by past and current research fellows and principal investigators of the Nereus Program network.

This includes members at 17 leading research institutes, addressing themes such as oceanography, biodiversity, fisheries, mariculture production, economics, pollution, public health and marine policy.

This book is a comprehensive resource for senior undergraduate and postgraduate readers studying social and natural science, as well as practitioners working in the field of natural resources management and marine conservation.

Specificaties

ISBN13:9780128179451
Taal:Engels
Bindwijze:Paperback

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Inhoudsopgave

<p>Section 1: Predicting future oceans<br>1. Rethinking oceans as coupled human-natural systems to achieve sustainability</p> <p>Section 2: Changing ocean systems<br>2. Synthesis: Changing ocean systems<br>3. Drivers of fisheries production in complex social-ecological systems<br>4. Changing Seasonality of the Sea: Past, Present, and Future<br>5. Extreme climate events in the oceans<br>6. Pathways of methylmercury accumulation in a changing ocean<br>7. Building confidence in projections of future ocean capacity<br>8. Coastal upwelling and climate change</p> <p>Section 3: Changing marine ecosystems and biodiversity<br>9. Sythesis: Changing marine ecosystems and biodiversity<br>10. Current and future biogeography of marine exploited groups under climate change<br>11. The role of cyclical oscillations in species distributions shifts under climate change<br>12. Changing biomass flows in marine ecosystems: From the past to the future<br>13. Jellyfishes in a changing ocean<br>14. Understanding fisheries using time series data: importance and opportunities emerging from models of bottom up forcing<br>15. The Sea Around Us as provider of global fisheries catch and related marine biodiversity data to the Nereus Program and civil society<br>16. Life history of marine fishes and their implications for the future oceans</p> <p>Section 4: Changing fisheries and seafood supply<br>17. Synthesis: Changing fisheries and seafood supply<br>18. Projecting fishing effort dynamics and the economics of fishing in the 21st century under climate change<br>19. Prospect of mariculture under climate change<br>20. Tourist seafood consumption's role in tourism adaptation in Pacific Island Countries for coastal food security under climate change <br>21. Integrating environmental information into stock assessment models for fisheries management<br>22. The future landscape of the global seafood market<br>23. Climate change adaptations and spatial fisheries management<br>24. Climate Change, Contaminants, and Country Food: Collaborating with Communities to Promote Food Security in the Arctic</p> <p>Section 5: Changing social world of the ocean<br>25. Synthesis: Changing social world of the oceans<br>26. The relevance of human rights to socially responsible seafood <br>27. The impact of environmental change on small-scale fishing communities: Moving beyond adaptive capacity to community response<br>28. Coastal Indigenous Peoples in global ocean governance<br>29. The role of corporate social responsibility for ocean sustainability<br>30. Ocean policy on the water – incorporating fishermen’s perspectives<br>31. Traditional ecological knowledge in displacement and migration<br>32. Can aspirations lead us to the oceans we want?</p> <p>Section 6: Governance and well-being in changing oceans<br>33. Synthesis: The opportunities of changing ocean governance for sustainability<br>34. A Blue Economy: Equitable, Sustainable, and Viable Development in the World’s Oceans<br>35. Exploring the knowns and unknowns of international fishery conflicts<br>36. The future of mangrove fishing communities<br>37. The last commons: (Re)constructing an ocean future<br>38. New actors, new possibilities, new challenges - Non-state actor participation in global fisheries management<br>39. Climate change vulnerability and ocean governance</p> <p>Section 7: Ocean governance beyond boundaries<br>40. Synthesis: The opportunities of changing ocean governance for sustainability with Erik<br>41. Conserving the great blue "beyond." Incorporating the dynamic and connected nature of the open ocean in the biodiversity beyond national jurisdiction (BBNJ) negotiations<br>42. Legitimacy as a resource for effective international marine management<br>43. Improving fisheries governance in a fragmented and decentralized world<br>44. The Trouble with Tunas: International Fisheries Science and Policy in an Uncertain Future<br>45. The road to implementing an ecosystem-based approach to high seas fisheries management<br>46. Ocean Pollution in an Era of Changing Oceans and Climate Change: Towards Ocean Conservation Solutions<br>47. Beyond prediction: Radical Ocean Futures– A science fiction prototyping approach to imagining our future oceans</p> <p>Section 8: Conclusion<br>48. Future pathways for the oceans considering climate change and social equity</p>

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        Predicting Future Oceans