7 research outputs found
The Kelp Forest Challenge: A collaborative global movement to protect and restore 4 million hectares of kelp forests
A framework for mapping and monitoring human-ocean interactions in near real-time during COVID-19 and beyond
The human response to the COVID-19 pandemic set in motion an unprecedented shift in human activity with unknown long-term effects. The impacts in marine systems are expected to be highly dynamic at local and global scales. However, in comparison to terrestrial ecosystems, we are not well-prepared to document these changes in marine and coastal environments. The problems are two-fold: 1) manual and siloed data collection and processing, and 2) reliance on marine professionals for observation and analysis. These problems are relevant beyond the pandemic and are a barrier to understanding rapidly evolving blue economies, the impacts of climate change, and the many other changes our modern-day oceans are undergoing. The “Our Ocean in COVID-19” project, which aims to track human-ocean interactions throughout the pandemic, uses the new eOceans platform (eOceans.app) to overcome these barriers. Working at local scales, a global network of ocean scientists and citizen scientists are collaborating to monitor the ocean in near real-time. The purpose of this paper is to bring this project to the attention of the marine conservation community, researchers, and the public wanting to track changes in their area. As our team continues to grow, this project will provide important baselines and temporal patterns for ocean conservation, policy, and innovation as society transitions towards a new normal. It may also provide a proof-of-concept for real-time, collaborative ocean monitoring that breaks down silos between academia, government, and at-sea stakeholders to create a stronger and more democratic blue economy with communities more resilient to ocean and global change.</p
The Kelp Forest Challenge: A collaborative global movement to protect and restore 4 million hectares of kelp
Marine kelp forests cover 1/3 of our world's coastlines, are heralded as a nature-based solution to address socio-environmental
issues, connect hundreds of millions of people with the ocean, and support a rich web of biodiversity throughout
our oceans. But they are increasingly threatened with some areas reporting over 90% declines in kelp forest cover in living
memory. Despite their importance and the threats they face, kelp forests are entirely absent from the international conservation
dialogue. No international laws, policies, or targets focus on kelp forests and very few countries consider them in their
national policy. The Kelp Forest Challenge addresses that gap. Together with 252 kelp experts, professionals, and citizens
from 25 countries, the Kelp Forest Challenge was developed as a grassroots vision of what the world can achieve for kelp
forest conservation. It is a global call to restore 1 million and protect 3 million hectares of kelp forests by 2040. This is a
monumental challenge, that will require coordination across multiple levels of society and the mobilization of immense
resources. Pledges may therefore include area for protection or restoration, enabling pledges which assist in conservation
(funding, equipment, professional expertise, capacity building), or awareness-based pledges which increase awareness or
education about kelp forests. Correspondingly, participants may be from government, scientific institutions, private sector,
NGOs, community groups, or individuals. This challenge is the beginning of a 17-year mission to save our kelp forests and
anyone and any organisation is invited to participate
The Kelp Forest Challenge: A collaborative global movement to protect and restore 4 million hectares of kelp forests
AbstractMarine kelp forests cover 1/3 of our world's coastlines, are heralded as a nature-based solution to address socio-environmental issues, connect hundreds of millions of people with the ocean, and support a rich web of biodiversity throughout our oceans. But they are increasingly threatened with some areas reporting over 90% declines in kelp forest cover in living memory. Despite their importance and the threats they face, kelp forests are entirely absent from the international conservation dialogue. No international laws, policies, or targets focus on kelp forests and very few countries consider them in their national policy. The Kelp Forest Challenge addresses that gap. Together with 252 kelp experts, professionals, and citizens from 25 countries, the Kelp Forest Challenge was developed as a grassroots vision of what the world can achieve for kelp forest conservation. It is a global call to restore 1 million and protect 3 million hectares of kelp forests by 2040. This is a monumental challenge, that will require coordination across multiple levels of society and the mobilization of immense resources. Pledges may therefore include area for protection or restoration, enabling pledges which assist in conservation (funding, equipment, professional expertise, capacity building), or awareness-based pledges which increase awareness or education about kelp forests. Correspondingly, participants may be from government, scientific institutions, private sector, NGOs, community groups, or individuals. This challenge is the beginning of a 17-year mission to save our kelp forests and anyone and any organisation is invited to participate
The Kelp Forest Challenge: A collaborative global movement to protect and restore 4 million hectares of kelp forests
AbstractMarine kelp forests cover 1/3 of our world's coastlines, are heralded as a nature-based solution to address socio-environmental issues, connect hundreds of millions of people with the ocean, and support a rich web of biodiversity throughout our oceans. But they are increasingly threatened with some areas reporting over 90% declines in kelp forest cover in living memory. Despite their importance and the threats they face, kelp forests are entirely absent from the international conservation dialogue. No international laws, policies, or targets focus on kelp forests and very few countries consider them in their national policy. The Kelp Forest Challenge addresses that gap. Together with 252 kelp experts, professionals, and citizens from 25 countries, the Kelp Forest Challenge was developed as a grassroots vision of what the world can achieve for kelp forest conservation. It is a global call to restore 1 million and protect 3 million hectares of kelp forests by 2040. This is a monumental challenge, that will require coordination across multiple levels of society and the mobilization of immense resources. Pledges may therefore include area for protection or restoration, enabling pledges which assist in conservation (funding, equipment, professional expertise, capacity building), or awareness-based pledges which increase awareness or education about kelp forests. Correspondingly, participants may be from government, scientific institutions, private sector, NGOs, community groups, or individuals. This challenge is the beginning of a 17-year mission to save our kelp forests and anyone and any organisation is invited to participate
