Marine Ecosystems Responses and Sustainability in a Changing Climate
A special issue of Sustainability (ISSN 2071-1050). This special issue belongs to the section "Air, Climate Change and Sustainability".
Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (1 October 2021) | Viewed by 11493
Special Issue Editors
Interests: marine ecology; fisheries and satellite oceanography; climate change ecology
Interests: marine remote sensing; marine GIS; fisheries resources monitoring and assessment; climate change impact; aquaculture zone management
Special Issues, Collections and Topics in MDPI journals
Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
Marine ecosystems provide a multitude of ecological benefits and economic services to human. Nonetheless, these systems are increasingly being exposed to a broad spectrum of natural and anthropogenic influences, eliciting ecological responses often manifested in terms of changes in the marine biodiversity, species distribution and abundance, as well as variability in environmental conditions, marine production, and trophic energy transfer. Over the past and recent decades, human-induced threats including global warming, hypoxia, ocean acidification, eutrophication, marine habitat loss, biodiversity decline, and resource overexploitation have posed serious risks on the sustainability and capability of vulnerable marine ecosystems to maintain their integrity and functioning. Further, these threats are expected to exacerbate in the foreseeable future and, thus, underpin the need to further improve our understanding of how natural variability and anthropogenic threats will impact the various biogeochemical processes in the ocean which, in turn, could modify the marine ecosystem structure and function. Henceforth, by doing so, we can assist the ongoing and future efforts toward developing and improving scientific-informed and data-driven approaches of controlling/mitigating the marine ecological effects of multiple environmental and climate stressors.
For this Special Issue, we cordially invite papers focusing/working on the following research subjects/topics:
(1) Environmental and climate drivers of marine ecosystem variability;
(2) Observation- and model-based studies of environmental- and climate-induced changes in the distribution of marine taxa across local, regional, and global scales; and
(3) Contemporary and future states and responses of marine ecosystems to multiple stressors, drawing out ecological implications relevant to conservation planning and sustainable ocean resource management
Dr. Irene Alabia
Prof. Yang Liu
Guest Editors
Manuscript Submission Information
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Keywords
marine environmental and climate change responses; marine resource sustainability; natural and anthropogenic environmental threats; marine species distributions
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