Browsing BC3 Journal Articles by Author "Ojea, E."
Now showing items 1-6 of 6
-
Adaption planning to climate change in industrial fisheries: Progress in the Basque tropical tuna fishery
Rubio, I.; Hobday, A.J.; Ojea, E. (Marine Policy, 2024-03-01)Climate change impacts on ocean living organisms and ecosystems have flow-on effects on fisheries and their associated values. Industrial fisheries operate long distance fleets that potentially have the capacity to respond ... -
Benefits From Water Related Ecosystem Services in Africa and Climate Change
Pettinotti, L.; de Ayala, A.; Ojea, E. (Ecological Economics, 2018-07-01)The present study collects original monetary estimates for water related ecosystem service benefits on the African continent from 36 valuation studies. A database of 178 monetary estimates is constructed to conduct a ... -
Research priorities for seafood-dependent livelihoods under ocean climate change extreme events
Ojea, E.; Ilosvay, X.E.; Salgueiro-Otero, D.; Rubio, I.; Tidd, A.N.; Caballero, S.V.; Bueno-Pardo, J.; Aguión, A.; Barazzetta, F.; Ameneiro, J. (Current Opinion in Environmental Sustainability, 2023)The current magnitude of ocean extreme events already exceeds the end-of-the-decade scenario estimates, and therefore incremental adaptation measures will render insufficient for seafood-dependent livelihoods. Nevertheless, ... -
Skippers' preferred adaptation and transformation responses to catch declines in a large-scale tuna fishery
Rubio, I.; Hobday, A.J.; Ojea, E. (ICES Journal of Marine Science, 2022)At first glance, large-scale fisheries may seem adaptable to climate change. Adaptation takes place from the governance to the individual level of fishers. At the individual level, skippers make day-to-day decisions on ... -
Social connectivity and adaptive capacity strategies in large-scale fisheries
Rubio, I.; Hileman, J.; Ojea, E. (Ecology and Society, 2021-01-01)Large-scale fisheries are important social-ecological systems that are increasingly being threatened by global climate change. Adaptive capacity is key for moving fisheries onto climate resilient pathways, however, ... -
Southward re-distribution of tropical tuna fisheries activity can be explained by technological and management change
Rubio, I.; Ganzedo U., U.; Hobday, A.J.; Ojea, E. (John Wiley & Sons Ltd, 2020)There is broad evidence of climate change causing shifts in fish distribution worldwide, but less is known about the response of fisheries to these changes. Responses to climate-driven shifts in a fishery may be constrained ...