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Planning adaptation to climate change in fast-warming marine regions with seafood-dependent coastal communities
Authors:Alistair J. Hobday  Kevern Cochrane  Nicola Downey-Breedt  James Howard  Shankar Aswani  Val Byfield  Greg Duggan  Elethu Duna  Leo X. C. Dutra  Stewart D. Frusher  Elizabeth A. Fulton  Louise Gammage  Maria A. Gasalla  Chevon Griffiths  Almeida Guissamulo  Marcus Haward  Astrid Jarre  Sarah M. Jennings  Tia Jordan  Jessica Joyner  Narayana Kumar Ramani  Swathi Lekshmi Perumal Shanmugasundaram  Willem Malherbe  Kelly Ortega Cisneros  Adina Paytan  Gretta T. Pecl  Éva E. Plagányi  Ekaterina E. Popova  Haja Razafindrainibe  Michael Roberts  Prathiba Rohit  Shyam Salim Sainulabdeen  Warwick Sauer  Sathianandan Thayyil Valappil  Paryiappanal Ulahannan Zacharia  E. Ingrid van Putten
Affiliation:1.CSIRO Oceans and Atmosphere,Hobart,Australia;2.Centre for Marine Socioecology,University of Tasmania,Hobart,Australia;3.Department of Ichthyology and Fisheries Science,Rhodes University,Grahamstown,South Africa;4.University of Cape Town,Cape Town,South Africa;5.National Oceanography Centre,Southampton,UK;6.CSIRO Oceans and Atmosphere,Brisbane,Australia;7.School of Marine Studies, Faculty of Science, Technology & Environment,The University of the South Pacific,Suva,Fiji Islands;8.Institute for Marine and Antarctic Studies,University of Tasmania,Hobart,Australia;9.Fisheries Ecosystems Laboratory, Oceanographic Institute,University of S?o Paulo, Cidade Universitária,S?o Paulo,Brazil;10.Universidade Eduardo Mondlane,Maputo,Mozambique;11.Tasmanian School of Business and Economics,University of Tasmania,Hobart,Australia;12.Central Marine Fisheries Research Institute,Indian Council of Agricultural Research,Kochi,India;13.University of California Santa Cruz,Santa Cruz,USA;14.K Service d’appui a la gestion de l’environnement (SAGE – Fampandrosoana Maharitra),Antananarivo,Madagascar
Abstract:Many coastal communities rely on living marine resources for livelihoods and food security. These resources are commonly under stress from overfishing, pollution, coastal development and habitat degradation. Climate change is an additional stressor beginning to impact coastal systems and communities, but may also lead to opportunities for some species and the people they sustain. We describe the research approach for a multi-country project, focused on the southern hemisphere, designed to contribute to improving fishing community adaptation efforts by characterizing, assessing and predicting the future of coastal-marine food resources, and co-developing adaptation options through the provision and sharing of knowledge across fast-warming marine regions (i.e. marine ‘hotspots’). These hotspots represent natural laboratories for observing change and concomitant human adaptive responses, and for developing adaptation options and management strategies. Focusing on adaptation options and strategies for enhancing coastal resilience at the local level will contribute to capacity building and local empowerment in order to minimise negative outcomes and take advantage of opportunities arising from climate change. However, developing comparative approaches across regions that differ in political institutions, socio-economic community demographics, resource dependency and research capacity is challenging. Here, we describe physical, biological, social and governance tools to allow hotspot comparisons, and several methods to evaluate and enhance interactions within a multi-nation research team. Strong partnerships within and between the focal regions are critical to scientific and political support for development of effective approaches to reduce future vulnerability. Comparing these hotspot regions will enhance local adaptation responses and generate outcomes applicable to other regions.
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