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      Climate-Smart Design for Ecosystem Management: A Test Application for Coral Reefs

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          Abstract

          The interactive and cumulative impacts of climate change on natural resources such as coral reefs present numerous challenges for conservation planning and management. Climate change adaptation is complex due to climate-stressor interactions across multiple spatial and temporal scales. This leaves decision makers worldwide faced with local, regional, and global-scale threats to ecosystem processes and services, occurring over time frames that require both near-term and long-term planning. Thus there is a need for structured approaches to adaptation planning that integrate existing methods for vulnerability assessment with design and evaluation of effective adaptation responses. The Corals and Climate Adaptation Planning project of the U.S. Coral Reef Task Force seeks to develop guidance for improving coral reef management through tailored application of a climate-smart approach. This approach is based on principles from a recently-published guide which provides a framework for adopting forward-looking goals, based on assessing vulnerabilities to climate change and applying a structured process to design effective adaptation strategies. Work presented in this paper includes: (1) examination of the climate-smart management cycle as it relates to coral reefs; (2) a compilation of adaptation strategies for coral reefs drawn from a comprehensive review of the literature; (3) in-depth demonstration of climate-smart design for place-based crafting of robust adaptation actions; and (4) feedback from stakeholders on the perceived usefulness of the approach. We conclude with a discussion of lessons-learned on integrating climate-smart design into real-world management planning processes and a call from stakeholders for an “adaptation design tool” that is now under development.

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          Most cited references49

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          Coral bleaching: causes and consequences

          B Brown (1997)
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            CORAL REEFS. Genomic determinants of coral heat tolerance across latitudes.

            As global warming continues, reef-building corals could avoid local population declines through "genetic rescue" involving exchange of heat-tolerant genotypes across latitudes, but only if latitudinal variation in thermal tolerance is heritable. Here, we show an up-to-10-fold increase in odds of survival of coral larvae under heat stress when their parents come from a warmer lower-latitude location. Elevated thermal tolerance was associated with heritable differences in expression of oxidative, extracellular, transport, and mitochondrial functions that indicated a lack of prior stress. Moreover, two genomic regions strongly responded to selection for thermal tolerance in interlatitudinal crosses. These results demonstrate that variation in coral thermal tolerance across latitudes has a strong genetic basis and could serve as raw material for natural selection.
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              Rapid poleward range expansion of tropical reef corals in response to rising sea surface temperatures

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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                703-347-8584 , west.jordan@epa.gov
                Journal
                Environ Manage
                Environ Manage
                Environmental Management
                Springer US (New York )
                0364-152X
                1432-1009
                12 October 2016
                12 October 2016
                2017
                : 59
                : 1
                : 102-117
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Office of Research and Development, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1200 Pennsylvania Ave, NW (8601P), Washington, DC 20460 USA
                [2 ]Tetra Tech, Inc., 737 Bishop St., Suite 2340, Honolulu, HI 96813-3201 USA
                [3 ]Tetra Tech, Inc., Center for Ecological Sciences, 502 W. Cordova Road, Suite C, Santa Fe, NM 87505 USA
                [4 ]The Baldwin Group, Inc., NOAA Coral Reef Conservation Program, SSMC4, N/OCM6, Rm 10329, 1305 East West Hwy, Silver Spring, MD 20910 USA
                [5 ]Private Consultant, 4755 Northeast Lambs Lane, Poulsbo, WA 98370 USA
                [6 ]U.S. Department of the Interior, Office of Insular Affairs, MS 2429, 1849 C St. NW, Washington, DC 20240 USA
                [7 ]The Nature Conservancy, 74 Wall Street, Seattle, WA 98121 USA
                Article
                774
                10.1007/s00267-016-0774-3
                5219003
                27734086
                7ee173ab-645e-4db5-bb5a-e9ee253a9521
                © The Author(s) 2016

                This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License ( http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made.

                History
                : 3 June 2016
                : 29 September 2016
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                © Springer Science+Business Media New York 2017

                Environmental management, Policy & Planning
                climate change,vulnerability,adaptation planning,natural resource management,coral reefs,decision making

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