Social-ecological vulnerability of coral reef fisheries to climatic shocks

This circular examines the vulnerability of coral reef social-ecological communities to one effect of climate change, coral bleaching. The objective was to develop and test in Kenya a community-level vulnerability assessment approach that incorporated both ecological and socio-economic dimensions of vulnerability in order to target and guide interventions to reduce vulnerability. In addition to a range of direct threats such as siltation, overfishing and coral disease, coral reefs are now threat ened by climate change. Climate impacts on coral reefs and associated fisheries include: increasing seawater temperatures; changes in water chemistry (acidification); changes in seasonality; and increased severity and frequency of storms, which affect coral reef ecosystems as well as fisheries activities and infrastructure. Coral bleaching and associated coral mortality as a result of high seawater temperatures is one of the most striking impacts of climate change that has been observed to date. As warming trends continue, the frequency and severity of bleaching episodes are predicted to increase with potentially fundamental impacts on the world’s coral reefs and on the fisheries and livelihoods that depend on them. The analysis presented in this circular combined ecological vulnerability (social exposure), social sensitivity and social adaptive capacity into an index of social-ecological vulnerability to coral bleaching. All three components of vulnerability varied across the sites an d contributed to the variation in social-ecological vulnerability. Comparison over time showed that adaptive capacity and sensitivity indices increased from 2008 until 2012 owing to increases in community infrastructure and availability of credit. Disaggregated analysis of how adaptive capacity and sensitivity varied between different segments of society identified the young, migrants and those who do not participate in decision-making as having both higher sensitivity and lower adaptive capacit y and, hence, as being the most vulnerable to changes in the productivity of reef fisheries.

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Fishery and Aquaculture Economics and Policy Division
Format: Book (series) biblioteca
Language:English
Published: 2013
Online Access:https://openknowledge.fao.org/handle/20.500.14283/AP972E
http://www.fao.org/3/a-ap972e.pdf
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
id dig-fao-it-20.500.14283-AP972E
record_format koha
spelling dig-fao-it-20.500.14283-AP972E2024-03-16T14:19:27Z Social-ecological vulnerability of coral reef fisheries to climatic shocks Social-ecological vulnerability of coral reef fisheries to climatic shocks Fishery and Aquaculture Economics and Policy Division This circular examines the vulnerability of coral reef social-ecological communities to one effect of climate change, coral bleaching. The objective was to develop and test in Kenya a community-level vulnerability assessment approach that incorporated both ecological and socio-economic dimensions of vulnerability in order to target and guide interventions to reduce vulnerability. In addition to a range of direct threats such as siltation, overfishing and coral disease, coral reefs are now threat ened by climate change. Climate impacts on coral reefs and associated fisheries include: increasing seawater temperatures; changes in water chemistry (acidification); changes in seasonality; and increased severity and frequency of storms, which affect coral reef ecosystems as well as fisheries activities and infrastructure. Coral bleaching and associated coral mortality as a result of high seawater temperatures is one of the most striking impacts of climate change that has been observed to date. As warming trends continue, the frequency and severity of bleaching episodes are predicted to increase with potentially fundamental impacts on the world’s coral reefs and on the fisheries and livelihoods that depend on them. The analysis presented in this circular combined ecological vulnerability (social exposure), social sensitivity and social adaptive capacity into an index of social-ecological vulnerability to coral bleaching. All three components of vulnerability varied across the sites an d contributed to the variation in social-ecological vulnerability. Comparison over time showed that adaptive capacity and sensitivity indices increased from 2008 until 2012 owing to increases in community infrastructure and availability of credit. Disaggregated analysis of how adaptive capacity and sensitivity varied between different segments of society identified the young, migrants and those who do not participate in decision-making as having both higher sensitivity and lower adaptive capacit y and, hence, as being the most vulnerable to changes in the productivity of reef fisheries. 2023-10-18T13:29:24Z 2023-10-18T13:29:24Z 2013 2020-11-09T21:05:22.0000000Z Book (series) 9789251076927 2070-6065 https://openknowledge.fao.org/handle/20.500.14283/AP972E http://www.fao.org/3/a-ap972e.pdf English FAO Fisheries and Aquaculture Circular 2070-6065|20706065 - C1082 FAO 63 application/pdf Kenya
institution FAO IT
collection DSpace
country Italia
countrycode IT
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-fao-it
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Sur
libraryname David Lubin Memorial Library of FAO
language English
description This circular examines the vulnerability of coral reef social-ecological communities to one effect of climate change, coral bleaching. The objective was to develop and test in Kenya a community-level vulnerability assessment approach that incorporated both ecological and socio-economic dimensions of vulnerability in order to target and guide interventions to reduce vulnerability. In addition to a range of direct threats such as siltation, overfishing and coral disease, coral reefs are now threat ened by climate change. Climate impacts on coral reefs and associated fisheries include: increasing seawater temperatures; changes in water chemistry (acidification); changes in seasonality; and increased severity and frequency of storms, which affect coral reef ecosystems as well as fisheries activities and infrastructure. Coral bleaching and associated coral mortality as a result of high seawater temperatures is one of the most striking impacts of climate change that has been observed to date. As warming trends continue, the frequency and severity of bleaching episodes are predicted to increase with potentially fundamental impacts on the world’s coral reefs and on the fisheries and livelihoods that depend on them. The analysis presented in this circular combined ecological vulnerability (social exposure), social sensitivity and social adaptive capacity into an index of social-ecological vulnerability to coral bleaching. All three components of vulnerability varied across the sites an d contributed to the variation in social-ecological vulnerability. Comparison over time showed that adaptive capacity and sensitivity indices increased from 2008 until 2012 owing to increases in community infrastructure and availability of credit. Disaggregated analysis of how adaptive capacity and sensitivity varied between different segments of society identified the young, migrants and those who do not participate in decision-making as having both higher sensitivity and lower adaptive capacit y and, hence, as being the most vulnerable to changes in the productivity of reef fisheries.
format Book (series)
author Fishery and Aquaculture Economics and Policy Division
spellingShingle Fishery and Aquaculture Economics and Policy Division
Social-ecological vulnerability of coral reef fisheries to climatic shocks
author_facet Fishery and Aquaculture Economics and Policy Division
author_sort Fishery and Aquaculture Economics and Policy Division
title Social-ecological vulnerability of coral reef fisheries to climatic shocks
title_short Social-ecological vulnerability of coral reef fisheries to climatic shocks
title_full Social-ecological vulnerability of coral reef fisheries to climatic shocks
title_fullStr Social-ecological vulnerability of coral reef fisheries to climatic shocks
title_full_unstemmed Social-ecological vulnerability of coral reef fisheries to climatic shocks
title_sort social-ecological vulnerability of coral reef fisheries to climatic shocks
publishDate 2013
url https://openknowledge.fao.org/handle/20.500.14283/AP972E
http://www.fao.org/3/a-ap972e.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT fisheryandaquacultureeconomicsandpolicydivision socialecologicalvulnerabilityofcoralreeffisheriestoclimaticshocks
_version_ 1799250881530560512