PhD Project: Setting the Scene
Getting the blog up and running- firstly a little background to the project:
With the Scottish Marine Protected Area (MPA) Project firmly underway
it will become increasingly important to understand how marine
protected areas will perform in future scenarios of climate change. How
will climate change affect MPAs and are we planning for it?
Impacts on the oceans from climate change, such as melting sea ice
and the plight of polar bears, or rising sea temperatures and coral
bleaching, are well publicised. However, climate change is also
affecting the functioning of marine ecosystems in other ways; sea level
rise, changes in weather patterns and changes in ocean currents are also
altering ocean conditions. Species shifting their distribution in
response to these changes may not be protected by traditional marine
protected areas.
Although marine protected areas cannot guard against alterations in
sea temperature for example, through reducing other stressors such as
overfishing MPAs may mitigate the effects of climate change and are
still an important long-term conservation tool.
Questions about marine protected areas and climate change are only
just being addressed and current planning and management regimes may not
be able to cope with the pressures of climate change. Managers will
need to think strategically with carefully designed socioeconomic and
conservation goals. Monitoring and adaptive management will be key
facets in promoting climate change resilience and ecological integrity.
As a PhD student I will be aiming to answer some of the important
management and policy questions of marine protected areas in the context
of climate change. MPAs have been delivering results worldwide and
using the vast experience from international examples will be key to
understanding how climate change considerations can be applied to the
Scottish process.
This PhD will be supported by Climate XChange (CXC) to provide
timely information relating to MPAs and climate change. I am working
closely with Tavis Potts at the Centre for Sustainable Coasts, a joint initiative
between the James Hutton Institute (JHI) and SAMS addressing marine
policy in Scotland.
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