Transcript Slide 1

Opportunities and
Challenges for Coastal
Management in Oregon
Marine & Coastal Management
A process by which decisions are taken for the
development, conservation and sustainable use of
marine and coastal systems – biophysical, social,
cultural and economic.
Challenges & Opportunities
• Challenges & opportunities in coastal management
Include:
• Biological & physical systems
• Social, economic and political dimensions
• Available human resources including education &
training of managers and stakeholders
• Institutional & legal frameworks
• In the rest of the lecture we’ll explore some examples
from Oregon
Are our management actions
• Achievable?
• Affordable (cost & time)?
• Popular with decision makers, stakeholders,
public, voters?
Challenges: The Natural Environment
Challenges: The Natural Environment
• Our biggest challenge is understanding and adapting
to environmental change whether natural or human
induced
• Oregon’s coastal ecosystems - marine and terrestrial
– are adapted for change.
• Our coastal communities and economy not be so
resilient to change unless it is planned for.
Changing Beaches
and Shorelines
Oregon’s Shoreline
Oregon’s beaches and shoreline are an important
part of our identity.
Our coast is where we live, play and its generate
tourism income for our communities and state.
Much of the shoreline is managed by the state for
recreation.
Impacts on Beaches and Shorelines
http://seagrant.oregonstate.edu/video/flash/oregon-climate/shoreline-effects.html
Changing
Marine Ecosystems & Impacts on
Fisheries
Changing Ocean Ecosystems
Harley et al. 2006
Intensified upwelling?
Increased ocean temperature?
Increased ocean acidity? Changes in plankton & food chains?
Ocean Acidification
http://seagrant.oregonstate.edu/video/flash/oregon-climate/broader-effects.html
Impacts on Ocean Fisheries
Sea Temperature Anomaly
• California current
ecosystem has
changed often in the
past
Upwelling anomaly
Norton and Mason 2005
• Any changes due to
predicted warming
will be difficult to
detect because of
high natural
variability
• Changes that do
occur will affect
commercial fisheries
and recreational
fisheries
Changes in Upwelling
http://seagrant.oregonstate.edu/video/flash/oregon-climate/broader-effects.html
Impacts on Salmon Fishing
Salmon - Loss of Habitat
Salmon Habitat Lost in OR, ID, WA
• By 2030 OR
could lose15%
of its salmon
habitat
• By 2090 OR
could lose 45%
of its salmon
habitat
ISAB Climate Change Report 2007
• OR will lose more habitat than WA or ID
• Trout habitat less impacted than salmon habitat because salmon are
restricted to warmer waters by dams and other barriers
Salmon - Ocean survival
Warmer waters reduce
salmon survival:
• Decreased food
supply
• Higher metabolic
rates and less growth
• Increased migration
distances
• Increased predation
by warm water
species
Source: Peterson et al. 2006
Community and Social Challenges
Economic Change
On the ocean increased competition for space from the new
industrialization of the ocean:
• Offshore renewable energy
• Marine farming
• Dredging, dumping etc
In our communities:
• Decline of resource industries
• Tourism
• Immigration
• Retirees
• Rise of the service industry and minimum wage jobs
Coastal Development and Community Prosperity
Growth and development present both opportunities for and
challenges to community economic prosperity and ecological
sustainability.
We need to:
• Identify and create opportunities for economic and
environmentally sustainable development of our coastal
communities.
• Build the capability within coastal communities to create and
take take advantages of new opportunities.
Learning for Sustainable Communities
Collective learning determines a community’s ability to take
advantage of opportunities for sustainable economic and
ecological development.
Informed individuals & communities are better able to maintain &
improve the quality of the ecosystems and natural resources on
which they depend.
How can we build human capital, developing new models for
learning and engagement encompassing K-12, formal and
informal learning strategies and opportunities?
Changing Stakeholders: The Ocean Aware
There is unprecedented awareness among non-coastal
residents of the state of our coastal and ocean resources.
Management, education and communication actions have to be
increasingly aware of a new community of interest - the ocean
aware.
We need to understand the motivations of this group and
encourage initiatives that align the interests of both new and
traditional stakeholders.
Changing Stakeholders: The NGO Community
and a New Kind of Direct Action
Increasing outreach & research activities by nongovernmental organizations & industry associations engaged
in marine issues.
Stakeholder organizations and foundations do not necessarily
represent the wider interests of coastal communities nor is
their research always agenda free.
How can traditional agencies work with these organizations
to leverage new research resources while giving decision
makers and the public confidence in the integrity and quality
of this research?
Responding to The Management Challenge
Linking Research & Management
Decision-makers need to educate researchers by about the
kinds of data and information they will need, and their time lines
for decisions.
Researchers in the natural and social sciences need to educate
decision-makers about what is at stake in the interactions of
society and economy with the natural environment.
Two-way dialogue between researchers and decision-makers is
critical.
The Data Revolution
Ecosystem based management demands the collection and use
of vast amount of data about our oceans and coasts.
For the first time we have the technology to collect, store and
disseminate this data to specialists and citizenry alike.
To maximize the value of this data we need to transform it into
useful information by:
• Understanding the needs of potential users of coastal and
ocean information.
• Considering the skill levels of users and where necessary
increasing these skill levels.
Unprecedented Change in Marine Governance
• Pew Commission & Ocean Commission early to mid 00s
• Bush Administration response 2005
• State responses 2005 -present:
• E.g. California, Massachusetts, West Coast Governors
Agreement on Ocean Health etc.
• Obama Administration 2009 :
• Catch Shares
• Interim Ocean Policy Policy
• Marine Spatial Planning
Planning for the 21st Century Ocean Uses
Emerging scientific consensus around ecosystem-based
management as a conceptual model for managing marine
systems.
It is about maintaining healthy marine & coastal ecosystems so
that they can provide the services humans want and need for
this and future generations.
It is place focused rather than sector focused.
EBM focused research and education explicitly integrates
multiple disciplines and perspectives and emphasizes their
interconnection.
Planning for the 21st Century Ocean Uses
Putting EBM into effect means giving greater attention to
research that supports marine spatial planning by:
• Identifying management units based on biotic and abiotic
characteristics and disturbance regimes.
• Establishing the value of the ecosystem services provided
by these management units.
• Evaluating regulatory and non-regulatory management that
align incentives for the sustainable use of resources within
the zones.
• Encouraging adaptive management programs to monitor,
review and adjust zones and their regulation as required.
State Planning
http://seagrant.oregonstate.edu/video/flash/oregon-climate/government.html
Take Home Messages
• Coastal management is about change management
• Changes in marine & coastal ecosystems are unpredictable
& are a result of both natural variability and human induced
variability
• Oregon’s coastal ecosystems - marine and terrestrial - are
adapted for change
• Coastal communities and their dependence on coastal
services may not be so resilient to change unless it is
planned for
• Change planning has to integrate both bio-physical and
human dimensions of coastal systems
• We are only beginning to figure out how to do this.
Questions?