Marine environments have undergone large-scale changes in recent decades as a result of multiple anthropogenic pressures, such as overfishing, eutrophication, habitat fragmentation, etc., causing often nonlinear ecosystem responses. At the same time, management institutions lack the appropriate measures to address these abrupt transformations. We focus on existing examples from social–ecological systems of European seas that can be used to inform and advise future management. Examples from the Black Sea and the Baltic Sea on long-term ecosystem changes caused by eutrophication and fisheries, as well as changes in management institutions, illustrate nonlinear dynamics in social–ecological systems. Furthermore, we present two major future cha...
Effectively reducing cumulative impacts on marine ecosystems requires co-evolution between science, ...
Climate change is anticipated to have long-term and widespread direct consequences for the European ...
none4siRegime shifts, i.e. sudden changes in the structure and function of ecosystems, are of growin...
Marine environments have undergone large-scale changes in recent decades as a result of multiple ant...
Future climate biogeochemical projections indicate large changes in the ocean with environmental con...
The sustainable exploitation of marine ecosystem services is dependent on achieving and maintaining ...
Coastal global oceans are expected to undergo drastic changes driven by climate change and increasin...
Abstract Ecosystem-based management (EBM) has emerged as the generally agreed strategy for managing ...
Existing and emerging EU legislation requires member states to adopt the Ecosystem Approach (EA) for...
Europe’s four regional seas (Baltic, Black, Mediterranean and NE Atlantic) have suffered severe envi...
Anticipating future changes in marine social-ecological systems (MSES) several decades into the futu...
Ecosystem-based management (EBM) has emerged as the generally agreed strategy for managing ecosystem...
The most seriously threatened European seas are the North Sea, the Baltic and the Black Sea. Here th...
The ELME project is an EU Sixth Framework Programme consisting of a consortium of 28 research groups...
Unprecedented basin-scale ecological changes are occurring in our seas. As temperature and carbon di...
Effectively reducing cumulative impacts on marine ecosystems requires co-evolution between science, ...
Climate change is anticipated to have long-term and widespread direct consequences for the European ...
none4siRegime shifts, i.e. sudden changes in the structure and function of ecosystems, are of growin...
Marine environments have undergone large-scale changes in recent decades as a result of multiple ant...
Future climate biogeochemical projections indicate large changes in the ocean with environmental con...
The sustainable exploitation of marine ecosystem services is dependent on achieving and maintaining ...
Coastal global oceans are expected to undergo drastic changes driven by climate change and increasin...
Abstract Ecosystem-based management (EBM) has emerged as the generally agreed strategy for managing ...
Existing and emerging EU legislation requires member states to adopt the Ecosystem Approach (EA) for...
Europe’s four regional seas (Baltic, Black, Mediterranean and NE Atlantic) have suffered severe envi...
Anticipating future changes in marine social-ecological systems (MSES) several decades into the futu...
Ecosystem-based management (EBM) has emerged as the generally agreed strategy for managing ecosystem...
The most seriously threatened European seas are the North Sea, the Baltic and the Black Sea. Here th...
The ELME project is an EU Sixth Framework Programme consisting of a consortium of 28 research groups...
Unprecedented basin-scale ecological changes are occurring in our seas. As temperature and carbon di...
Effectively reducing cumulative impacts on marine ecosystems requires co-evolution between science, ...
Climate change is anticipated to have long-term and widespread direct consequences for the European ...
none4siRegime shifts, i.e. sudden changes in the structure and function of ecosystems, are of growin...