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Abstract
This article reviews and examines the most significant climate-change-related impacts and adaptation from the perspective of stakeholders in Greenlandic fisheries. The study was constructed as a comprehensive, multi-site, bottom-up case study around Greenlandic fisheries (south-north/offshore-inshore), where interviews and workshops with Greenlandic fishers and stakeholders have communicated their observations of fishery changes associated with changes in the marine environment within the last decade. Key observations include: changes in sea ice cover; increased abundance of known species in North Greenland; fish species relocation and periodic absences in coastal systems; a northward movement of the shrimp fishery; new and unprecedented bycatch issues; and new fisheries. Stakeholder knowledge acknowledges the capacity of both offshore and coastal fisheries to adapt to changing seasonality and distribution. Factory capacity and decision-making as well as bycatch legislation have been identified as the most critical bottlenecks for (re)diversifying fisheries and increasing the value of the locally available resources.
Original language | English |
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Journal | Climate Research |
Volume | 91 |
Pages (from-to) | 175-189 |
Number of pages | 15 |
ISSN | 0936-577X |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 30 Nov 2023 |
Keywords
- Adaptation capacity
- Arctic fisheries
- Inuit knowledge
- Livelihood adaptation
- Local ecological knowledge
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Arctic biodiversity change and its consequences: Assessing, monitoring and predicting the effects of ecosystem tipping cascades on marine ecosystem services and dependent human systems (ECOTIP)
Jacobsen, R. B. (Lecturer)
17 May 2022Activity: Talks and presentations › Conference presentations