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      Diagnostic analysis of the Canary Current System of West Africa: the need for a paradigm shift to proactive natural resource management

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          Abstract

          Abstract Large exports of land-based contaminants to the ocean exacerbate the effects of climate change, pollute ocean waters, disrupt biogeochemical cycles, harm marine organisms, and consequently jeopardise food security and the livelihoods of ocean-dependent communities. The Canary Current Large Marine Ecosystem (CCLME) is characterised by a mix of the Atlantic Ocean basin waters, reverse flow from the Mediterranean Sea, and inland waters from adjacent countries. This biodiversity-rich ecosystem is a source of ecosystem goods and services that provide sustenance for populations in the coastal states of West Africa and beyond. However, with the ocean surface warming, ocean productivity and fisheries’ outputs have declined across multiple trophic levels. Therefore, in this diagnostic study based on a systematic literature review (publications from 2009 to 2020), we (a) provide an integrative assessment of the CCLME with the exception of Morocco, in the context of the modular large marine ecosystem framework using the categories ‘environmental’ (productivity, fish and fisheries, pollution, and ecosystem health) and ‘non-environmental’ (socioeconomic and governance), and (b) identify knowledge gaps and data scarce regions. The key drivers of change in the CCLME were identified as fishing pressure, land-based pollution, coastal habitat loss, and climate change. Productivity, land-based pollution, and ecosystem health were priority areas for data collection in the CCLME, with data deficiencies particularly apparent in The Gambia and Guinea. Therefore, to mitigate further degradation and accelerate progress toward sustainable management of the CCLME, research should be conducted in these priority areas of data deficiency. Furthermore, as most drivers of change in this ecosystem are related to weak management and a lack of regulatory enforcement, we recommend effective implementation, monitoring, and enforcement of existing national and transboundary regulations, as well as ecosystem-based human-centred management approaches, as proactive strategies for decoupling anthropogenic disturbances from climate change and optimising the productivity of the CCLME.

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          Most cited references179

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          Area-based conservation in the twenty-first century

          Humanity will soon define a new era for nature-one that seeks to transform decades of underwhelming responses to the global biodiversity crisis. Area-based conservation efforts, which include both protected areas and other effective area-based conservation measures, are likely to extend and diversify. However, persistent shortfalls in ecological representation and management effectiveness diminish the potential role of area-based conservation in stemming biodiversity loss. Here we show how the expansion of protected areas by national governments since 2010 has had limited success in increasing the coverage across different elements of biodiversity (ecoregions, 12,056 threatened species, 'Key Biodiversity Areas' and wilderness areas) and ecosystem services (productive fisheries, and carbon services on land and sea). To be more successful after 2020, area-based conservation must contribute more effectively to meeting global biodiversity goals-ranging from preventing extinctions to retaining the most-intact ecosystems-and must better collaborate with the many Indigenous peoples, community groups and private initiatives that are central to the successful conservation of biodiversity. The long-term success of area-based conservation requires parties to the Convention on Biological Diversity to secure adequate financing, plan for climate change and make biodiversity conservation a far stronger part of land, water and sea management policies.
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            Atmospheric iron deposition: global distribution, variability, and human perturbations.

            Atmospheric inputs of iron to the open ocean are hypothesized to modulate ocean biogeochemistry. This review presents an integration of available observations of atmospheric iron and iron deposition, and also covers bioavailable iron distributions. Methods for estimating temporal variability in ocean deposition over the recent past are reviewed. Desert dust iron is estimated to represent 95% of the global atmospheric iron cycle, and combustion sources of iron are responsible for the remaining 5%. Humans may be significantly perturbing desert dust (up to 50%). The sources of bioavailable iron are less well understood than those of iron, partly because we do not know what speciation of the iron is bioavailable. Bioavailable iron can derive from atmospheric processing of relatively insoluble desert dust iron or from direct emissions of soluble iron from combustion sources. These results imply that humans could be substantially impacting iron and bioavailable iron deposition to ocean regions, but there are large uncertainties in our understanding.
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              A comparison of Eastern Boundary Upwelling Ecosystems

                Author and article information

                Journal
                ocr
                Ocean and Coastal Research
                Ocean Coast. Res.
                Instituto Oceanográfico da Universidade de São Paulo (São Paulo, SP, Brazil )
                2675-2824
                2021
                : 69
                : suppl 1
                : e21043
                Affiliations
                [4] Sierra Leone orgnameTacugama Chimpanzee Sanctuary Sierra Leone
                [5] Bern Bern orgnameUniversity of Bern orgdiv1Institute of Geography Switzerland
                [1] Bonn orgnameUniversity of Bonn orgdiv1Center for Development Research (ZEF) Germany
                [3] São Vicente orgnameInstituto do Mar I.P. - IMAR Cabo Verde
                [2] orgnameUniversité Félix Houphouët-Boigny - WABES/SPIBES orgdiv1African Centre of Excellence, Pôle Scientifique d’Innovation Côte d’Ivoire
                Article
                S2675-28242021000200806 S2675-2824(21)06900000806
                10.1590/2675-2824069.21022io
                2b0fb6b3-1e26-43aa-a729-86d2a0d3a48e

                This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

                History
                : 15 March 2021
                : 30 November 2021
                Page count
                Figures: 0, Tables: 0, Equations: 0, References: 182, Pages: 0
                Product

                SciELO Brazil

                Categories
                Case Report

                Canary Current Large Marine Ecosystem,Anthropogenic disturbance,Climate change,Land-based pollution,Productivity

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