2016
DOI: 10.3389/fmars.2016.00048
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Observed and Projected Impacts of Climate Change on Marine Fisheries, Aquaculture, Coastal Tourism, and Human Health: An Update

Abstract: communities in order to assess risk, aid coastal development planning, and build decision support systems.

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Cited by 165 publications
(130 citation statements)
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References 163 publications
(299 reference statements)
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“…Economic globalization and markets can also drive changes in demands for certain marine species, pressure on resources, migration to coastal communities, and changes in nearshore vessel traffic (e.g., Tuler et al 2008, Bennett et al 2016a. Both biophysical and social drivers of change are presenting as risks or opportunities in coastal social-ecological systems (Adger et al 2005b, Sales 2009), making it especially relevant to understand whether communities are able to adapt (Gallopín 2006, Bennett et al 2014, 2016a. Assessments of adaptive capacity, i.e., "the ability of systems, institutions, humans, and other organisms to adjust to potential damage, take advantage of opportunities, or to respond to the consequences" (IPCC 2014:118), can provide such an understanding (Armitage andPlummer 2010, Mcleod et al 2016).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Economic globalization and markets can also drive changes in demands for certain marine species, pressure on resources, migration to coastal communities, and changes in nearshore vessel traffic (e.g., Tuler et al 2008, Bennett et al 2016a. Both biophysical and social drivers of change are presenting as risks or opportunities in coastal social-ecological systems (Adger et al 2005b, Sales 2009), making it especially relevant to understand whether communities are able to adapt (Gallopín 2006, Bennett et al 2014, 2016a. Assessments of adaptive capacity, i.e., "the ability of systems, institutions, humans, and other organisms to adjust to potential damage, take advantage of opportunities, or to respond to the consequences" (IPCC 2014:118), can provide such an understanding (Armitage andPlummer 2010, Mcleod et al 2016).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Here, we examine the strengths and drawbacks of 11 approaches for evaluating adaptive capacity, with a particular focus on coastal communities as linked social-ecological systems (SESs). Coastal communities are at significant risk from the cumulative effects of anthropogenic change and coastal development to climate change and they also support a large proportion of the world's human population (Hallegatte et al 2013, Weatherdon et al 2016a). As such, measuring and fostering the adaptive capacities of coastal socialecological systems is of particular importance for researchers, planners, and policy makers (Wong et al 2014).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The dramatic impacts of hurricanes on the marine fisheries sector are well-documented, and it is clear that an increase in frequency and severity of such events will have major economic and social consequences (Tilmant et al 1994;Buck 2005;Solis et al 2013).Recreational fishing effort in Florida is substantially influenced by migration to the state and by tourism, both of which may decline somewhat with climatic warming due to increasing attractiveness of currently temperate regions. Impacts of sea level rise and extreme weather on Florida's tourism infrastructure may further reduce recreational fishing in the state (Weatherdon et al 2016). Climate in and of itself is likely to affect the level of recreational fishing effort (Carter & Letson 2009;Whitehad & Willard 2016).…”
Section: Climate Change Impacts On Marine Fisheries Usersmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In 2014, my colleague Alexandre Magnan (IDDRI) and I launched The Oceans 2015 Initiative (http://bit.ly/1M6YiS6) which aimed, together with other initiatives such as those of the Ocean and Climate Platform (Unesco plus 67 organizations; http://ocean-climate.org), at bringing ocean matters at the negotiating table. We gathered a group of about 15 experts to produce scientific papers (Gattuso et al ; Howes et al ; Weatherdon et al ), a multilingual policy brief (Magnan et al ), as well as multilingual products for the general public (animated movie and a cartoon). We also organized and were involved in several side events both the Blue Zone, in the Civil Society Zone and in various places in the city.…”
Section: How Do Scientists Prepare For a Cop Meeting?mentioning
confidence: 99%