Marine Resources, Climate Change and International Management Regimes

This volume examines how international institutions set up to manage marine living resources are adapting to the effects of climate change on the geographic distribution of these resources. In the Barents Sea, the world’s biggest cod stock is expanding north-eastwards, while in the Nordic Seas signi...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Hønneland, Geir, Johansen, Geir Odd, Jørgensen, Anne-Kristin, Loeng, Harald, McBride, Margaret Mary, Molenaar, Erik J., Raspotnik, Andreas, Sandø, Anne Britt, Spijkers, Jessica, Stiansen, Jan Erik, Stokke, Olav Schram, Totland, Olav Anders, Young, Oran R., Østhagen, Andreas
Format: Book
Language:English
Published: Bloomsbury Academic 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10852/96608
http://urn.nb.no/URN:NBN:no-99115
https://doi.org/10.5040/9780755618392
Description
Summary:This volume examines how international institutions set up to manage marine living resources are adapting to the effects of climate change on the geographic distribution of these resources. In the Barents Sea, the world’s biggest cod stock is expanding north-eastwards, while in the Nordic Seas significant changes in abundance, distribution and migration patterns can be observed in the world’s largest stocks for mackerel and herring. In the Antarctic, increasing temperatures and the associated declines in sea ice, ocean acidification and changes in circulation is likely to affect the geographical distribution of krill, the keystone species of Southern Ocean ecosystems. These developments put established international management regimes under pressure. In this interdisciplinary research volume, world-leading marine biologists, international lawyers and political scientists join efforts to study the resilience of Arctic and Antarctic marine resource management institutions to large-scale shifts of major marine stocks.