| Literature DB >> 31098878 |
Gretta T Pecl1,2, Emily Ogier3,4, Sarah Jennings4,5, Ingrid van Putten4,6, Christine Crawford3, Hannah Fogarty3,4, Stewart Frusher4, Alistair J Hobday4,6, John Keane3, Emma Lee4,7, Catriona MacLeod3,4, Craig Mundy3, Jemina Stuart-Smith3, Sean Tracey3.
Abstract
While governments and natural resource managers grapple with how to respond to climatic changes, many marine-dependent individuals, organisations and user-groups in fast-changing regions of the world are already adjusting their behaviour to accommodate these. However, we have little information on the nature of these autonomous adaptations that are being initiated by resource user-groups. The east coast of Tasmania, Australia, is one of the world's fastest warming marine regions with extensive climate-driven changes in biodiversity already observed. We present and compare examples of autonomous adaptations from marine users of the region to provide insights into factors that may have constrained or facilitated the available range of autonomous adaptation options and discuss potential interactions with governmental planned adaptations. We aim to support effective adaptation by identifying the suite of changes that marine users are making largely without government or management intervention, i.e. autonomous adaptations, to better understand these and their potential interactions with formal adaptation strategies.Keywords: Autonomous adaptation; Climate change; Indigenous knowledge; Local knowledge; Marine biodiversity; Species redistribution
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31098878 DOI: 10.1007/s13280-019-01186-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ambio ISSN: 0044-7447 Impact factor: 5.129