A global synthesis of climate vulnerability assessments on marine fisheries: Methods, scales, and knowledge co‐production
Undertaking climate vulnerability assessments (CVAs) on marine fisheries is instrumental to the identification of regions, species, and stakeholders at risk of impacts from climate change, and the development of effective and targeted responses for fisheries adaptation. In this global literature rev...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Global change biology 2023-07, Vol.29 (13), p.3545-3561 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Undertaking climate vulnerability assessments (CVAs) on marine fisheries is instrumental to the identification of regions, species, and stakeholders at risk of impacts from climate change, and the development of effective and targeted responses for fisheries adaptation. In this global literature review, we addressed three important questions to characterize fisheries CVAs: (i) what are the available approaches to develop CVAs in various social–ecological contexts, (ii) are different geographic scales and regions adequately represented, and (iii) how do diverse knowledge systems contribute to current understanding of vulnerability? As part of these general research efforts, we identified and characterized an inventory of frameworks and indicators that encompass a wide range of foci on ecological and socioeconomic dimensions of climate vulnerability on fisheries. Our analysis highlighted a large gap between countries with top research inputs and the most urgent adaptation needs. More research and resources are needed in low‐income tropical countries to ensure existing inequities are not exacerbated. We also identified an uneven research focus across spatial scales and cautioned a possible scale mismatch between assessment and management needs. Drawing on this information, we catalog (1) a suite of research directions that could improve the utility and applicability of CVAs, particularly the examination of barriers and enabling conditions that influence the uptake of CVA results into management responses at multiple levels, (2) the lessons that have been learned from applications in data‐limited regions, particularly the use of proxy indicators and knowledge co‐production to overcome the problem of data deficiency, and (3) opportunities for wider applications, for example diversifying the use of vulnerability indicators in broader monitoring and management schemes. This information is used to provide a set of recommendations that could advance meaningful CVA practices for fisheries management and promote effective translation of climate vulnerability into adaptation actions.
We conducted an analysis of various barriers and advances in methodologies, geographic scales, and knowledge co‐production from 65 worldwide case studies focusing on marine fisheries for climate vulnerability assessments. Our study identifies frameworks and indicators that cover a broad spectrum of ecological and socioeconomic dimensions. Our findings emphasize a significant disparity bet |
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ISSN: | 1354-1013 1365-2486 |
DOI: | 10.1111/gcb.16733 |