Elsevier

Marine Policy

Volume 88, February 2018, Pages 279-284
Marine Policy

Small-scale fisheries under climate change in the Pacific Islands region

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.marpol.2017.11.011Get rights and content
Under a Creative Commons license
open access

Highlights

  • Improving SSF requires resources at all levels – local, national and regional.

  • SSF communities need to be empowered and informed to adapt to climate change.

  • SSF communities need socio-economic and scientific tools to adapt to CC.

Abstract

For Pacific Island communities, social change has always been a part of their socio-political lives, while environmental changes were always transient and reversible, so that they understood and engaged with their ocean as a provider for food, culture and life. However, recent unprecedented and irreversible changes brought on by global climate change challenge this norm and alter their lagoons and adjacent oceans into unfamiliar territories. Climate change already is affecting, and has been projected to continue to disproportionately impact, Pacific Island Countries and Territories (PICTs) through rising temperatures, sea-level rise, saltwater intrusion of freshwater resources, coastal erosion, an increase in extreme weather events, altered rainfall patterns, coral reef bleaching, and ocean acidification. While knowledge is building about potential impacts on ecosystems and some target stocks, there is little information available for communities, governments and regional institutions on how to respond to these changes and adapt. What are the consequences for marine conservation, fisheries management and coastal planning at local, national and regional scales? What strategies and policies can best support and enable responses to these challenges across different scales? What opportunities exist to finance necessary climate change adaptation and mitigation measures? To consider these urgent issues, this paper synthesises innovative research methods, and studies many of the looming scientific, policy and governance challenges from a diversity of perspectives and disciplines.

Cited by (0)

1

Joint first authors.