Climate change is expected to have increasing impacts on marine ecosystems which will threaten the livelihoods and wellbeing of millions of people. Drawing on social-ecological network and sociodemographic data collected via face-to-face interviews with 404 small-scale commercial fishers from 9 Galician communities (Spain), we empirically examine the adaptation pathways that fishers follow when they face hypothetical impacts on their fishery resources and test the role of five social-ecological network structures on fisher's stated intended responses to such scenarios. Our results show that fishers generally intend to follow a 'remain-adapt-transform-exit (the fishery)' pathway when faced with increasing climate impacts. Next, we demonstrat...
Climate change is having a significant influence on global fish production as well as on small-scale...
Financiado para publicación en acceso aberto: Universidade de Vigo/CISUGThe collective harvest behav...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Nature Research via the ...
Climate change is expected to have increasing impacts on marine ecosystems which will threaten the l...
Large-scale fisheries are important social-ecological systems that are increasingly being threatened...
[Abstract] Small-cale fisheries are important for livelihoods, food security, jobs and income worldw...
In attempting to predict the impact of major ecological or climatic change on livelihoods, insights ...
Adaptation to climate change has traditionally been studied at the individual scale, with most studi...
Complex networks of relationships among and between people and nature (social-ecological networks) p...
Climate change is expected to reinforce undesirable social and ecological feedbacks between ecosyste...
Progressive climate-driven environmental changes are threatening the global livelihoods of small-sca...
As the impacts of climate change on human society accelerate, coastal communities are vulnerable to ...
Highlights: • A social-ecological system (SES) is analyzed through a multilayer network approach. ...
As changes in climate, governance, and organization reshape the dynamics of small-scale fisheries ar...
Assessing options for adapting to climate change is an important part of building resilient fishing ...
Climate change is having a significant influence on global fish production as well as on small-scale...
Financiado para publicación en acceso aberto: Universidade de Vigo/CISUGThe collective harvest behav...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Nature Research via the ...
Climate change is expected to have increasing impacts on marine ecosystems which will threaten the l...
Large-scale fisheries are important social-ecological systems that are increasingly being threatened...
[Abstract] Small-cale fisheries are important for livelihoods, food security, jobs and income worldw...
In attempting to predict the impact of major ecological or climatic change on livelihoods, insights ...
Adaptation to climate change has traditionally been studied at the individual scale, with most studi...
Complex networks of relationships among and between people and nature (social-ecological networks) p...
Climate change is expected to reinforce undesirable social and ecological feedbacks between ecosyste...
Progressive climate-driven environmental changes are threatening the global livelihoods of small-sca...
As the impacts of climate change on human society accelerate, coastal communities are vulnerable to ...
Highlights: • A social-ecological system (SES) is analyzed through a multilayer network approach. ...
As changes in climate, governance, and organization reshape the dynamics of small-scale fisheries ar...
Assessing options for adapting to climate change is an important part of building resilient fishing ...
Climate change is having a significant influence on global fish production as well as on small-scale...
Financiado para publicación en acceso aberto: Universidade de Vigo/CISUGThe collective harvest behav...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Nature Research via the ...