4.6 Article

'Adaptation science' is needed to inform the sustainable management of the world's oceans in the face of climate change

Journal

ICES JOURNAL OF MARINE SCIENCE
Volume 79, Issue 2, Pages 457-462

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/icesjms/fsac014

Keywords

adaptation to climate change; climate change risks; ecosystem-based management; governance; marine resources management transformation; resilient ecosystems; social resilience; vulnerable marine ecosystems

Funding

  1. VADAPES project
  2. Biodiversity Foundation of the Spanish Ministry for the Ecological Transition and the Demographic Challenge
  3. European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme [773713]
  4. Institute of Marine Research, Norway [83741]
  5. EU H2020 funding [817578, 869300]
  6. 'Severo Ochoa Centre of Excellence' accreditation [CEX2019-000928-S]
  7. H2020 Societal Challenges Programme [773713] Funding Source: H2020 Societal Challenges Programme

Ask authors/readers for more resources

The global challenge of climate change requires urgent development of innovative adaptive solutions for managing marine resources. Contributions to a themed article set explore emerging climate change impacts, assess system risks, evaluate adaptation options, and consider societal perceptions. Future development in adaptation science will require interdisciplinary collaboration and concrete solutions to address the challenges of climate change and human activity.
The global response to the challenge of increasingly rapid and severe climate change is shifting from a focus on mitigation and remediation of impacts to a pragmatic adaptation framework. Innovative adaptive solutions that transform the way in which we manage the world's oceans and, particularly, the harvesting of marine resources in a sustainable manner, are urgently needed. In that context, ICES Journal of Marine Science solicited contributions to the themed article set (TS), Exploring adaptation capacity of the world's oceans and marine resources to climate change. We summarize the contributions included in this TS that provide examples of emerging climate change impacts, assess system risks at subnational and international scales, prove and evaluate different adaptation options and approaches, and explore societal and stakeholder perceptions. We also provide some food for thought on possible future developments in a transdisciplinary adaptation science working at the interface between ecology, socio-economics, and policy-governance, and that will have to provide concrete solutions to the challenges represented by climate-change and anthropogenic activity. Success will depend on the extent to which new knowledge and approaches can be integrated into the decision-making process to support evidence-based climate policy and ecosystem-based management. This includes testing their effectiveness in real systems, but also consider how social acceptance of adaptive measures will/will not support their full implementation.

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