0
Article ? AI-assigned paper type based on the abstract. Classification may not be perfect — flag errors using the feedback button. Sign in to save

Theme Session G_Integrating the human dimension into adaptive marine management to achieve both ecological and social outcomes

Journal of Reproductive Healthcare and Medicine 2025

Summary

This conference book of abstracts from ICES Theme Session G covers integrating the human dimension into adaptive marine management, with topics spanning stakeholder engagement, fisheries governance, marine spatial planning, and coastal sustainability. One presentation specifically addresses the dual risk of microplastics and ocean acidification on fish health.

Study Type Environmental

Book of abstracts of theme session G:Integrating the human dimension into adaptive marine management to achieve both ecological and social outcomesConveners: Rachel Seary (United Kingdom), Emily Ogier (Australia), Erin Satterthwaite (United States)Transforming Marine Management: Stakeholder-Driven Strategies for Sustainable Futures The Dual risk of Microplastics and Acidification on fish health Evaluating the Effects of Management Decisions on Summer Flounder (Paralichthys dentatus) Recreational Fishery Performance Which actors and factors do recreational anglers hold causally responsible for the collapse of the western Baltic cod (Gadus morhua) stock and the closure of the harvest fishery?Not all fisher decisions driven by economics, but how to include these behavioural drivers in our modelsTracing the human dimension and its contributions across ICES science: A bibliometric case studyConsidering cumulative impacts with sequence factor in the impact assessment of offshore windfarms on fisheriesSocial impact considerations for the dynamic approach to fisheries management: Lessons from the California Commercial Dungeness Crab fisheryiKaluk: An Overview of Arctic char Fishery in Nunatsiavut (Labrador, Canada) to Support Inuit Food SecurityMarine Spatial Planning under a changing climate: a case study in Mallorca, Balearic IslandsA Culturally Significant Areas Framework for Spatial Planning and Management in the Coastal Environment of South AfricaSocio-Economic Condition and Livelihood Status of the Fishers Involved at the Meghna Riverine Fish Market Chain in Bhola, BangladeshModelling Systemic Shifts: A Scenario-Based Modelling of Fishers’ Wellbeing in ScotlandCoastal Sustainability Circles and Perspectives for Emerald Cooperation in Transboundary Transitional WatersMeasuring the causal impact of harvest restrictions on Western Baltic cod anglers’ effort, stock status perception, and harvest policy preferencesSocio-cultural mapping of fishing grounds in English waters - a co-design projectSocial-ecological network analysis of Europe's leading seafood processing hub: integrating social and technical components into marine resource managementMultidimensional indicator framework to evaluate fisheries management performance Toward social-ecological indicator integration in managing oceans and coasts SEADOTs – Social-ecological Ocean management applications with Digital Ocean Twins Connecting the dots: Operationalizing the social dimension in European fisheries Focusing on decision-spaces: models as boundary objects to integrate the human dimension Climate Risk Assessment of Biodiversity-Related Services Supporting Small-Scale Fisheries in the Balearic IslandsBeneath and Beyond: Decolonizing Benthic Baselines in Nunatsiavut, Canada Market squid fishery participant responses to environmental shocks: Implications for a socio-ecological fishery networkThe 'human dimension' is now central - although not yet operational - to Australia's marine science agendaMatchmaking in Sweden: ecosystem-based management meets marine spatial planning A fisheries sustainability conceptual classification system to support socio-economic indicator evaluation and developmentFrom Activities to Impact: A Theory of Change and PESTEL-based framework for monitoring Mission Ocean outcomes Integrating human dimensions in European MSP – lessons from current practices Advancing Ecosystem-First Marine Spatial Planning: A Transboundary Governance Approach for the Atlantic and Arctic

Share this paper