- Coral and Marine Ecosystems Studies
- Coastal and Marine Management
- Arctic and Russian Policy Studies
- Echinoderm biology and ecology
- Indigenous Studies and Ecology
- Marine and coastal plant biology
- Ocean Acidification Effects and Responses
- Marine animal studies overview
- International Maritime Law Issues
- Marine and fisheries research
- Meat and Animal Product Quality
- Tuberculosis Research and Epidemiology
- Climate Change, Adaptation, Migration
- Aquaculture Nutrition and Growth
- Aquaculture disease management and microbiota
- Diagnosis and treatment of tuberculosis
- Global Energy and Sustainability Research
- Natural Resources and Economic Development
- Polar Research and Ecology
- Island Studies and Pacific Affairs
- Pacific and Southeast Asian Studies
- Aquatic life and conservation
- Botany and Plant Ecology Studies
- Indigenous Health, Education, and Rights
- Agriculture Sustainability and Environmental Impact
University of Tasmania
2020-2023
Centre for Marine Socioecology
2020-2023
CSIRO Oceans and Atmosphere
2015-2023
Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation
2014-2022
Massey University
2020
Humans have relied on coastal resources for centuries. However, current growth in population and increased accessibility of through technology resulted overcrowded often conflicted spaces. The recent global move towards development national blue economy strategies further highlights the focus to address a broad range industries. need manage sustainable future exploitation both over-utilised emergent is political environmental complexity. To this complexity, we draw perspectives...
Coastal Indigenous and Traditional communities are starting to see changes their lives from climate change, whether this is species range or displacement land changes. For many of these communities, the ability adequately adapt limited by governance structures they required live within, which differ customary practices culture. In November 2019, a group Peoples, attended Future Seas 2030 workshop discussed consequences biggest barriers for using traditional knowledge in order contribute...
Migratory marine species (e.g., seabirds, mammals, fish, and sea turtles) cross connect distant communities ecosystems throughout their transboundary journeys. Due to multi-jurisdictional cross-cultural movements, studying, managing, protecting migratory as well habitats migration routes are deeply political geographically complex tasks. Despite a place-based cultural connection species; inherent rights, responsibilities, authority manage Sea Country (marine territory), Indigenous far too...
Significance Rotating the harvest of natural resources is a management strategy that humans have used on land for centuries, but it less commonly applied to marine resources. Marine animals, such as sea cucumbers, scallops, and abalone, may be particularly suited this form management. Although highly important many communities worldwide, they are often severely overexploited, underlining need effective easy manage strategies. We modeled rotational zone multispecies cucumber fishery in...
In order to inform decision making and policy, research address sustainability challenges requires cross-disciplinary approaches that are co-created with a wide inclusive diversity of disciplines stakeholders. As the UN Decade Ocean Science for Sustainable Development approaches, it is therefore timely take stock global range questions development policies restore sustain ocean health. We synthesised from major science policy horizon scanning exercises, identifying 89 relevance governance....
Adaptation pathways are decision-making processes which sequence actions over time to account for rapid change and future uncertainty. In developing economies practice can guide climate-resilient development (CRD) but is hampered by complex political dynamics, intensified 'resource curses' of abundant natural resources. We tested an adaptation approach large-scale resource in Papua New Guinea's Bismarck Sea. engaged with five contested proposals deep sea mining, oil palm tourism integrate...
Coastal Indigenous and Traditional Peoples communities are starting to see changes their lives from climate change, whether this is species range change or displacement land changes.For many of these the ability adequately adapt limited by governance structures they required live within, which differ customary practices culture.A group attended Future Seas 2030 workshop in November 2019 discussed consequences along with biggest barriers for contribute towards more sustainable future using...
Abstract The dynamics of marine systems at decadal scales are notoriously hard to predict—hence references this timescale as the “grey zone” for ocean prediction. Nevertheless, decadal-scale prediction is a rapidly developing field with an increasing number applications help guide stewardship and sustainable use environments. Such predictions can provide industry managers information more suited support planning management over strategic timeframes, compared seasonal forecasts or long-term...
Food for all: designing sustainable and secure future seafood systemsAnna K. Farmery*1, 2, Karen A. Alexander2,3, Kelli Anderson2,4, Julia L. Blanchard2,3, Chris. G. Carter2,3, Evans2,5, Mibu Fischer7, Aysha Fleming2,6, Stewart Frusher2,3, Elizabeth Fulton2,5, Bianca Haas2,3, Catriona MacLeod2,3, Linda Murray8, Kirsty Nash2,3, Gretta T. Pecl2,3, Yannick Rousseau2,3, Rowan Trebilco2,5, Ingrid E. van Putten2,5, Senoveva Mauli1, Leo X.C Dutra2,7, Dean Greeno9, Jeremie Kaltavara1, Reg Watson2,3...
Australian science has evolved to include a number of initiatives designed promote and guide ethical culturally appropriate Indigenous participation engagement. While interest overall engagement between people marine scientists appears have grown in the last decade there are also signs that some researchers may not be setting out engage with Australians on right foot. This research seeks move beyond anecdotal evidence about by gathering empirical information from scientists' perspective. Our...
Humans have relied on coastal resources for centuries. However, current growth in population and increased accessibility of through technology resulted overcrowded often conflicted spaces. The recent global move towards development national blue economy strategies further highlights the focus to address a broad range industries. need manage sustainable future exploitation both over-utilised emergent is political environmental complexity. To this complexity, we draw perspectives...
Humans have relied on coastal resources for centuries. However, current growth in population and increased accessibility of through technology resulted overcrowded often conflicted spaces. The recent global move towards development national blue economy strategies further highlights the focus to address a broad range industries. need manage sustainable future exploitation both over-utilised emergent is political environmental complexity. To this complexity, we draw perspectives...