Climate adaptation pathways and the role of social-ecological networks in small-scale fisheries

被引:0
|
作者
Diego Salgueiro-Otero
Michele L. Barnes
Elena Ojea
机构
[1] Future Oceans Lab,Centro de Investigación Mariña, Universidade de Vigo
[2] James Cook University,Australian Research Council (ARC) Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies
来源
关键词
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Climate change is expected to have increasing impacts on marine ecosystems which will threaten the livelihoods and wellbeing of millions of people. Drawing on social-ecological network and sociodemographic data collected via face-to-face interviews with 404 small-scale commercial fishers from 9 Galician communities (Spain), we empirically examine the adaptation pathways that fishers follow when they face hypothetical impacts on their fishery resources and test the role of five social-ecological network structures on fisher’s stated intended responses to such scenarios. Our results show that fishers generally intend to follow a ‘remain—adapt—transform—exit (the fishery)’ pathway when faced with increasing climate impacts. Next, we demonstrate that trust-based bonding ties and ties to informal leaders are associated with a ‘business-as-usual’ strategy. In contrast, communicative bonding ties are associated with adaptive responses, while communicative bridging ties are associated with transformative and exit strategies. Our findings provide key empirical insight that broaden our understanding of the intricate relationship between social networks and adaptive behaviour relevant to social-ecological systems worldwide.
引用
收藏
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Lagged social-ecological responses to climate and range shifts in fisheries
    Pinsky, Malin L.
    Fogarty, Michael
    CLIMATIC CHANGE, 2012, 115 (3-4) : 883 - 891
  • [22] Lagged social-ecological responses to climate and range shifts in fisheries
    Malin L. Pinsky
    Michael Fogarty
    Climatic Change, 2012, 115 : 883 - 891
  • [23] Managing Small-Scale Commercial Fisheries for Adaptive Capacity: Insights from Dynamic Social-Ecological Drivers of Change in Monterey Bay
    Aguilera, Stacy E.
    Cole, Jennifer
    Finkbeiner, Elena M.
    Le Cornu, Elodie
    Ban, Natalie C.
    Carr, Mark H.
    Cinner, Joshua E.
    Crowder, Larry B.
    Gelcich, Stefan
    Hicks, Christina C.
    Kittinger, John N.
    Martone, Rebecca
    Malone, Daniel
    Pomeroy, Carrie
    Starr, Richard M.
    Seram, Sanah
    Zuercher, Rachel
    Broad, Kenneth
    PLOS ONE, 2015, 10 (03):
  • [24] Social-ecological systems approach for adaptation to climate change
    Hossain, Md Sarwar
    Basak, Sayantani M.
    Amin, Md Nurul
    Anderson, Carl C.
    Cremin, Emilie
    Renaud, Fabrice G.
    SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT, 2024, 32 (03) : 2766 - 2778
  • [25] To manage inland fisheries is to manage at the social-ecological watershed scale
    Nguyen, Vivian M.
    Lynch, Abigail J.
    Young, Nathan
    Cowx, Ian G.
    Beard, T. Douglas, Jr.
    Taylor, William W.
    Cooke, Steven J.
    JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT, 2016, 181 : 312 - 325
  • [26] SMALL-SCALE FISHERIES IN THE CONTEMPORARY WORLD: ADAPTATION AND MANAGEMENT
    Blount, Ben
    REVIEWS IN ANTHROPOLOGY, 2005, 34 (01) : 1 - 19
  • [27] Understanding Social-Ecological Challenges of a Small-Scale Hilsa (Tenualosa ilisha) Fishery in Bangladesh
    Mozumder, Mohammad Mojibul Hoque
    Pyhala, Aili
    Wahab, Md. Abdul
    Sarkki, Simo
    Schneider, Petra
    Islam, Mohammad Mahmudul
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH AND PUBLIC HEALTH, 2019, 16 (23)
  • [28] Blue Food Sovereignty Benefits Social-Ecological Resilience: A Case Study of Small-Scale Fisheries Co-Management and Mariculture in Samoa
    Quimby, Barbara
    Roque, Anais Delilah
    Nebie, Elisabeth Kago Ilboudo
    Levine, Arielle
    Amaama, Safua Akeli
    Wutich, Amber
    Brewis, Alexandra
    Samuelu, Lemasaniai Erenei
    HUMAN ECOLOGY, 2023, 51 (02) : 279 - 289
  • [29] Blue Food Sovereignty Benefits Social-Ecological Resilience: A Case Study of Small-Scale Fisheries Co-Management and Mariculture in Samoa
    Barbara Quimby
    Anaís Delilah Roque
    Elisabeth Kago Ilboudo Nébié
    Arielle Levine
    Safua Akeli Amaama
    Amber Wutich
    Alexandra Brewis
    Lemasaniai Erenei Samuelu
    Human Ecology, 2023, 51 : 279 - 289
  • [30] Assessment of Ostrom's social-ecological system framework for the comanagement of small-scale marine fisheries in Colombia: from local fishers' perspectives
    Botto-Barrios, Darlin
    Saavedra-Diaz, Lina M.
    ECOLOGY AND SOCIETY, 2020, 25 (01):