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Climate change considerations are fundamental to management of deep‐sea resource extraction

Climate change manifestation in the ocean, through warming, oxygen loss, increasing acidification, and changing particulate organic carbon flux (one metric of altered food supply), is projected to affect most deep‐ocean ecosystems concomitantly with increasing direct human disturbance. Climate drive...

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Autores principales: Levin, Lisa A., Wei, Chih‐Lin, Dunn, Daniel C., Amon, Diva J., Ashford, Oliver S., Cheung, William W. L., Colaço, Ana, Dominguez‐Carrió, Carlos, Escobar, Elva G., Harden‐Davies, Harriet R., Drazen, Jeffrey C., Ismail, Khaira, Jones, Daniel O. B., Johnson, David E., Le, Jennifer T., Lejzerowicz, Franck, Mitarai, Satoshi, Morato, Telmo, Mulsow, Sandor, Snelgrove, Paul V. R., Sweetman, Andrew K., Yasuhara, Moriaki
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7496832/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32531093
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/gcb.15223
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author Levin, Lisa A.
Wei, Chih‐Lin
Dunn, Daniel C.
Amon, Diva J.
Ashford, Oliver S.
Cheung, William W. L.
Colaço, Ana
Dominguez‐Carrió, Carlos
Escobar, Elva G.
Harden‐Davies, Harriet R.
Drazen, Jeffrey C.
Ismail, Khaira
Jones, Daniel O. B.
Johnson, David E.
Le, Jennifer T.
Lejzerowicz, Franck
Mitarai, Satoshi
Morato, Telmo
Mulsow, Sandor
Snelgrove, Paul V. R.
Sweetman, Andrew K.
Yasuhara, Moriaki
author_facet Levin, Lisa A.
Wei, Chih‐Lin
Dunn, Daniel C.
Amon, Diva J.
Ashford, Oliver S.
Cheung, William W. L.
Colaço, Ana
Dominguez‐Carrió, Carlos
Escobar, Elva G.
Harden‐Davies, Harriet R.
Drazen, Jeffrey C.
Ismail, Khaira
Jones, Daniel O. B.
Johnson, David E.
Le, Jennifer T.
Lejzerowicz, Franck
Mitarai, Satoshi
Morato, Telmo
Mulsow, Sandor
Snelgrove, Paul V. R.
Sweetman, Andrew K.
Yasuhara, Moriaki
author_sort Levin, Lisa A.
collection PubMed
description Climate change manifestation in the ocean, through warming, oxygen loss, increasing acidification, and changing particulate organic carbon flux (one metric of altered food supply), is projected to affect most deep‐ocean ecosystems concomitantly with increasing direct human disturbance. Climate drivers will alter deep‐sea biodiversity and associated ecosystem services, and may interact with disturbance from resource extraction activities or even climate geoengineering. We suggest that to ensure the effective management of increasing use of the deep ocean (e.g., for bottom fishing, oil and gas extraction, and deep‐seabed mining), environmental management and developing regulations must consider climate change. Strategic planning, impact assessment and monitoring, spatial management, application of the precautionary approach, and full‐cost accounting of extraction activities should embrace climate consciousness. Coupled climate and biological modeling approaches applied in the water and on the seafloor can help accomplish this goal. For example, Earth‐System Model projections of climate‐change parameters at the seafloor reveal heterogeneity in projected climate hazard and time of emergence (beyond natural variability) in regions targeted for deep‐seabed mining. Models that combine climate‐induced changes in ocean circulation with particle tracking predict altered transport of early life stages (larvae) under climate change. Habitat suitability models can help assess the consequences of altered larval dispersal, predict climate refugia, and identify vulnerable regions for multiple species under climate change. Engaging the deep observing community can support the necessary data provisioning to mainstream climate into the development of environmental management plans. To illustrate this approach, we focus on deep‐seabed mining and the International Seabed Authority, whose mandates include regulation of all mineral‐related activities in international waters and protecting the marine environment from the harmful effects of mining. However, achieving deep‐ocean sustainability under the UN Sustainable Development Goals will require integration of climate consideration across all policy sectors.
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spelling pubmed-74968322020-09-25 Climate change considerations are fundamental to management of deep‐sea resource extraction Levin, Lisa A. Wei, Chih‐Lin Dunn, Daniel C. Amon, Diva J. Ashford, Oliver S. Cheung, William W. L. Colaço, Ana Dominguez‐Carrió, Carlos Escobar, Elva G. Harden‐Davies, Harriet R. Drazen, Jeffrey C. Ismail, Khaira Jones, Daniel O. B. Johnson, David E. Le, Jennifer T. Lejzerowicz, Franck Mitarai, Satoshi Morato, Telmo Mulsow, Sandor Snelgrove, Paul V. R. Sweetman, Andrew K. Yasuhara, Moriaki Glob Chang Biol Opinion Climate change manifestation in the ocean, through warming, oxygen loss, increasing acidification, and changing particulate organic carbon flux (one metric of altered food supply), is projected to affect most deep‐ocean ecosystems concomitantly with increasing direct human disturbance. Climate drivers will alter deep‐sea biodiversity and associated ecosystem services, and may interact with disturbance from resource extraction activities or even climate geoengineering. We suggest that to ensure the effective management of increasing use of the deep ocean (e.g., for bottom fishing, oil and gas extraction, and deep‐seabed mining), environmental management and developing regulations must consider climate change. Strategic planning, impact assessment and monitoring, spatial management, application of the precautionary approach, and full‐cost accounting of extraction activities should embrace climate consciousness. Coupled climate and biological modeling approaches applied in the water and on the seafloor can help accomplish this goal. For example, Earth‐System Model projections of climate‐change parameters at the seafloor reveal heterogeneity in projected climate hazard and time of emergence (beyond natural variability) in regions targeted for deep‐seabed mining. Models that combine climate‐induced changes in ocean circulation with particle tracking predict altered transport of early life stages (larvae) under climate change. Habitat suitability models can help assess the consequences of altered larval dispersal, predict climate refugia, and identify vulnerable regions for multiple species under climate change. Engaging the deep observing community can support the necessary data provisioning to mainstream climate into the development of environmental management plans. To illustrate this approach, we focus on deep‐seabed mining and the International Seabed Authority, whose mandates include regulation of all mineral‐related activities in international waters and protecting the marine environment from the harmful effects of mining. However, achieving deep‐ocean sustainability under the UN Sustainable Development Goals will require integration of climate consideration across all policy sectors. John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2020-07-06 2020-09 /pmc/articles/PMC7496832/ /pubmed/32531093 http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/gcb.15223 Text en © 2020 The Authors. Global Change Biology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd This is an open access article under the terms of the http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Opinion
Levin, Lisa A.
Wei, Chih‐Lin
Dunn, Daniel C.
Amon, Diva J.
Ashford, Oliver S.
Cheung, William W. L.
Colaço, Ana
Dominguez‐Carrió, Carlos
Escobar, Elva G.
Harden‐Davies, Harriet R.
Drazen, Jeffrey C.
Ismail, Khaira
Jones, Daniel O. B.
Johnson, David E.
Le, Jennifer T.
Lejzerowicz, Franck
Mitarai, Satoshi
Morato, Telmo
Mulsow, Sandor
Snelgrove, Paul V. R.
Sweetman, Andrew K.
Yasuhara, Moriaki
Climate change considerations are fundamental to management of deep‐sea resource extraction
title Climate change considerations are fundamental to management of deep‐sea resource extraction
title_full Climate change considerations are fundamental to management of deep‐sea resource extraction
title_fullStr Climate change considerations are fundamental to management of deep‐sea resource extraction
title_full_unstemmed Climate change considerations are fundamental to management of deep‐sea resource extraction
title_short Climate change considerations are fundamental to management of deep‐sea resource extraction
title_sort climate change considerations are fundamental to management of deep‐sea resource extraction
topic Opinion
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7496832/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32531093
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/gcb.15223
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