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Coastal ecosystems are generally controlled by the combination of bottom-up (resource-driven) and top-down (consumer-driven) trophic, and non-trophic ...
Read moreEcosystem management can play an important role in climate change mitigation and adaptation if current practices are evaluated and improved to move to...
Read moreThe exceptional diversity of shallow-water marine fishes contributes to the nutrition of millions of people worldwide through coastal wild-capture fis...
Read moreHuman interests often conflict with those of wildlife. In the coastal zone humans often exploit shellfish populations that would otherwise provide foo...
Read moreIntegrating food web indicators into ecological status assessments is central to developing effective management measures that can improve degraded ec...
Read moreCatchment-scale effects of forestry practices alter stream physical structures and influence composition and abundance of benthic communities. Looking...
Read moreMutually respectful and reciprocal relationships between people and their environment is a central tenet of many Indigenous world views. Across the Am...
Read moreSemi-natural habitats have been shaped by human disturbance regimes for centuries. Spatially and temporally heterogeneous land use practices, such as ...
Read more1. Improving the health of coastal and open sea marine ecosystems represents a substantial challenge for sustainable marine resource management, since...
Read more1. Customary harvests of wildlife underpin the livelihoods, cultural identities, well-being and ecological knowledge of many Indigenous peoples and lo...
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