A foresight analysis in fisheries science: The case study of migratory fish research

•A scenario-building method was applied to define alternative futures regarding research on diadromous fishes circa 2030.•The intensity level of research on diadromous fishes varied among scenarios that emerged from the analysis.•Scenarios showed a gradation from food production objectives to an eco...

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Veröffentlicht in:Futures : the journal of policy, planning and futures studies planning and futures studies, 2019-08, Vol.111, p.90-103
Hauptverfasser: Lambert, Patrick, Lassalle, Géraldine, Acolas, Marie-Laure, Bau, Frédérique, Castelnaud, Gérard, Daverat, Françoise, Jatteau, Philippe, Rigaud, Christian, Rochard, Eric, Roqueplo, Charles, de Jouvenel, François
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container_title Futures : the journal of policy, planning and futures studies
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creator Lambert, Patrick
Lassalle, Géraldine
Acolas, Marie-Laure
Bau, Frédérique
Castelnaud, Gérard
Daverat, Françoise
Jatteau, Philippe
Rigaud, Christian
Rochard, Eric
Roqueplo, Charles
de Jouvenel, François
description •A scenario-building method was applied to define alternative futures regarding research on diadromous fishes circa 2030.•The intensity level of research on diadromous fishes varied among scenarios that emerged from the analysis.•Scenarios showed a gradation from food production objectives to an ecosystem preservation approach.•Both conclusions had consequences for planning efficient research activities in this field.•Challenges for researchers were of different categories ranging from intellectual and ethical to operational and technical. Insights provided by futures analyses are becoming increasingly important for planning research activities in ecology in order to provide innovative solutions to society in the face of unprecedented environmental changes (Cook et al., 2014). Few applications exist in fisheries science. A rigorous methodology was applied to draw potential areas for future research on diadromous fishes circa 2030 that could be useful to a broader audience of European fisheries scientists. Diadromous fishes are species that migrate between fresh waters and the sea to complete their life cycle. First, twenty drivers were identified and fell within the scope of (i) diadromous fish conservation, (ii) their place and roles in modern societies, (iii) the main features of the world of science and research, and (iv) the main characteristics of research activities on this biological group. Past and future driver developments (i.e. retrospective analysis and hypotheses respectively) were examined. Then, the combination of drivers’ hypotheses within each of the four components listed above led to micro-scenarios describing how the components could plausibly change in the next fifteen years. Finally, global scenarios were obtained by juxtaposing four micro-scenarios, one for each of the components. Challenges that were identified from these global scenarios were mostly structural, intellectual with frequent revisions of theoretical and unchallenged concepts and ethical, and can be useful to better inform future changes in priorities and focus areas, technical investments, and funding opportunities operated by laboratories or individual researchers working on diadromous fishes. Also, this case study exploring the role of foresight in guiding research, particularly the part on the methodological description, could be of relevance for researchers in general.
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1873-6378
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source Elsevier ScienceDirect Journals
subjects Case studies
Diadromous fishes
Ecological monitoring
Ecology
Environmental Sciences
Fish
Fisheries
Futures study
Hypotheses
Research activities
Research methodology
Scenarios
Strategic orientations
title A foresight analysis in fisheries science: The case study of migratory fish research
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