First Biennial Ocean Climate Summit: Finding Solutions for San Francisco Bay Area’s Coast and Ocean. Proceedings of the Summit: April 29, 2008, Golden Gate Club, The Presidio San Francisco, California

Executive Summary: The marine environment plays a critical role in the amount of carbon dioxide (CO2) that remains within Earth’s atmosphere, but has not received as much attention as the terrestrial environment when it comes to climate change discussions, programs, and plans for action. It is now a...

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Main Authors: Higgason, Kelley, Brown, Maria
Format: Book
Language:English
Published: NOAA/National Ocean Service/Office of National Marine Sanctuaries 2008
Subjects:
Online Access:http://aquaticcommons.org/2269/
http://farallones.noaa.gov/ecosystemprotection/website/OCSproceedings042908.pdf
http://aquaticcommons.org/2269/1/higgason.pdf
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spelling ftaquaticcommons:oai:generic.eprints.org:2269 2023-05-15T17:52:13+02:00 First Biennial Ocean Climate Summit: Finding Solutions for San Francisco Bay Area’s Coast and Ocean. Proceedings of the Summit: April 29, 2008, Golden Gate Club, The Presidio San Francisco, California Higgason, Kelley Brown, Maria 2008 application/pdf http://aquaticcommons.org/2269/ http://farallones.noaa.gov/ecosystemprotection/website/OCSproceedings042908.pdf http://aquaticcommons.org/2269/1/higgason.pdf en eng NOAA/National Ocean Service/Office of National Marine Sanctuaries http://aquaticcommons.org/2269/1/higgason.pdf Higgason, Kelley and Brown, Maria (2008) First Biennial Ocean Climate Summit: Finding Solutions for San Francisco Bay Area’s Coast and Ocean. Proceedings of the Summit: April 29, 2008, Golden Gate Club, The Presidio San Francisco, California. Silver Spring, MD, NOAA/National Ocean Service/Office of National Marine Sanctuaries, (Marine Sanctuaries Conservation Series, ONMS-0) Management Environment Monograph or Serial Issue NonPeerReviewed 2008 ftaquaticcommons 2020-02-27T09:19:30Z Executive Summary: The marine environment plays a critical role in the amount of carbon dioxide (CO2) that remains within Earth’s atmosphere, but has not received as much attention as the terrestrial environment when it comes to climate change discussions, programs, and plans for action. It is now apparent that the oceans have begun to reach a state of CO2 saturation, no longer maintaining the “steady-state” carbon cycle that existed prior to the Industrial Revolution. The increasing amount of CO2 present within the oceans and the atmosphere has an effect on climate and a cascading effect on the marine environment. Potential physical effects of climate change within the marine environment, including ocean acidification, changes in wind and upwelling regimes, increasing global sea surface temperatures, and sea level rise, can lead to dramatic, fundamental changes within marine and coastal ecosystems. Altered ecosystems can result in changing coastal economies through a reduction in marine ecosystem services such as commercial fish stocks and coastal tourism. Local impacts from climate change should be a front line issue for natural resource managers, but they often feel too overwhelmed by the magnitude of this issue to begin to take action. They may not feel they have the time, funding, or staff to take on a challenge as large as climate change and continue to not act as a result. Already, natural resource managers work to balance the needs of humans and the economy with ecosystem biodiversity and resilience. Responsible decisions are made each day that consider a wide variety of stakeholders, including community members, agencies, non-profit organizations, and business/industry. The issue of climate change must be approached as a collaborative effort, one that natural resource managers can facilitate by balancing human demands with healthy ecosystem function through research and monitoring, education and outreach, and policy reform. The Scientific Expert Group on Climate Change in their 2007 report titled, “Confronting Climate Change: Avoiding the Unmanageable and Managing the Unavoidable” charged governments around the world with developing strategies to “adapt to ongoing and future changes in climate change by integrating the implications of climate change into resource management and infrastructure development”. Resource managers must make future management decisions within an uncertain and changing climate based on both physical and biological ecosystem response to climate change and human perception of and response to the issue. Climate change is the biggest threat facing any protected area today and resource managers must lead the charge in addressing this threat. (PDF has 59 pages.) Book Ocean acidification International Association of Aquatic and Marine Science Libraries and Information Centers (IAMSLIC): Aquatic Commons Golden Gate ENVELOPE(-134.237,-134.237,59.616,59.616)
institution Open Polar
collection International Association of Aquatic and Marine Science Libraries and Information Centers (IAMSLIC): Aquatic Commons
op_collection_id ftaquaticcommons
language English
topic Management
Environment
spellingShingle Management
Environment
Higgason, Kelley
Brown, Maria
First Biennial Ocean Climate Summit: Finding Solutions for San Francisco Bay Area’s Coast and Ocean. Proceedings of the Summit: April 29, 2008, Golden Gate Club, The Presidio San Francisco, California
topic_facet Management
Environment
description Executive Summary: The marine environment plays a critical role in the amount of carbon dioxide (CO2) that remains within Earth’s atmosphere, but has not received as much attention as the terrestrial environment when it comes to climate change discussions, programs, and plans for action. It is now apparent that the oceans have begun to reach a state of CO2 saturation, no longer maintaining the “steady-state” carbon cycle that existed prior to the Industrial Revolution. The increasing amount of CO2 present within the oceans and the atmosphere has an effect on climate and a cascading effect on the marine environment. Potential physical effects of climate change within the marine environment, including ocean acidification, changes in wind and upwelling regimes, increasing global sea surface temperatures, and sea level rise, can lead to dramatic, fundamental changes within marine and coastal ecosystems. Altered ecosystems can result in changing coastal economies through a reduction in marine ecosystem services such as commercial fish stocks and coastal tourism. Local impacts from climate change should be a front line issue for natural resource managers, but they often feel too overwhelmed by the magnitude of this issue to begin to take action. They may not feel they have the time, funding, or staff to take on a challenge as large as climate change and continue to not act as a result. Already, natural resource managers work to balance the needs of humans and the economy with ecosystem biodiversity and resilience. Responsible decisions are made each day that consider a wide variety of stakeholders, including community members, agencies, non-profit organizations, and business/industry. The issue of climate change must be approached as a collaborative effort, one that natural resource managers can facilitate by balancing human demands with healthy ecosystem function through research and monitoring, education and outreach, and policy reform. The Scientific Expert Group on Climate Change in their 2007 report titled, “Confronting Climate Change: Avoiding the Unmanageable and Managing the Unavoidable” charged governments around the world with developing strategies to “adapt to ongoing and future changes in climate change by integrating the implications of climate change into resource management and infrastructure development”. Resource managers must make future management decisions within an uncertain and changing climate based on both physical and biological ecosystem response to climate change and human perception of and response to the issue. Climate change is the biggest threat facing any protected area today and resource managers must lead the charge in addressing this threat. (PDF has 59 pages.)
format Book
author Higgason, Kelley
Brown, Maria
author_facet Higgason, Kelley
Brown, Maria
author_sort Higgason, Kelley
title First Biennial Ocean Climate Summit: Finding Solutions for San Francisco Bay Area’s Coast and Ocean. Proceedings of the Summit: April 29, 2008, Golden Gate Club, The Presidio San Francisco, California
title_short First Biennial Ocean Climate Summit: Finding Solutions for San Francisco Bay Area’s Coast and Ocean. Proceedings of the Summit: April 29, 2008, Golden Gate Club, The Presidio San Francisco, California
title_full First Biennial Ocean Climate Summit: Finding Solutions for San Francisco Bay Area’s Coast and Ocean. Proceedings of the Summit: April 29, 2008, Golden Gate Club, The Presidio San Francisco, California
title_fullStr First Biennial Ocean Climate Summit: Finding Solutions for San Francisco Bay Area’s Coast and Ocean. Proceedings of the Summit: April 29, 2008, Golden Gate Club, The Presidio San Francisco, California
title_full_unstemmed First Biennial Ocean Climate Summit: Finding Solutions for San Francisco Bay Area’s Coast and Ocean. Proceedings of the Summit: April 29, 2008, Golden Gate Club, The Presidio San Francisco, California
title_sort first biennial ocean climate summit: finding solutions for san francisco bay area’s coast and ocean. proceedings of the summit: april 29, 2008, golden gate club, the presidio san francisco, california
publisher NOAA/National Ocean Service/Office of National Marine Sanctuaries
publishDate 2008
url http://aquaticcommons.org/2269/
http://farallones.noaa.gov/ecosystemprotection/website/OCSproceedings042908.pdf
http://aquaticcommons.org/2269/1/higgason.pdf
long_lat ENVELOPE(-134.237,-134.237,59.616,59.616)
geographic Golden Gate
geographic_facet Golden Gate
genre Ocean acidification
genre_facet Ocean acidification
op_relation http://aquaticcommons.org/2269/1/higgason.pdf
Higgason, Kelley and Brown, Maria (2008) First Biennial Ocean Climate Summit: Finding Solutions for San Francisco Bay Area’s Coast and Ocean. Proceedings of the Summit: April 29, 2008, Golden Gate Club, The Presidio San Francisco, California. Silver Spring, MD, NOAA/National Ocean Service/Office of National Marine Sanctuaries, (Marine Sanctuaries Conservation Series, ONMS-0)
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