What are the major global threats and impacts in marine environments? Investigating the contours of a shared perception among marine scientists from the bottom-up

W.J. Boonstra, Katharina Maj Ottosen, Ana Sofia Ferreira, A. Richter, L.A. Rogers, Martin Wæver Pedersen, Alexandros Kokkalis, H. Bardarson, Sara Bonanomi, W. Butler, F.K. Diekert, Nadia Fouzai, M. Holma, R.E. Holt, K. Kvile, Evandro Malanski, J.I. Macdonald, E. Nieminen, G. Romagnoni, Martin SnickarsB. Weigel, P. Woods, Johanna Yletyinen, J.D. Whittington

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Abstract

Marine scientists broadly agree on which major processes influence the sustainability of marine environments worldwide. Recent studies argue that such shared perceptions crucially shape scientific agendas and are subject to a confirmation bias. Based on these findings a more explicit engagement with scientists' (shared) perceptions of global change in marine environments is called for. This paper takes stock of the shared understanding in marine science of the most pertinent, worldwide threats and impacts that currently affect marine environments. Using results from an email survey among leading academics in marine science this article explores if a shared research agenda in relation to global change in marine environments exists. The analysis demonstrates that marine scientists across disciplines are largely in agreement on some common features of global marine change. Nevertheless, the analysis also highlights where natural and social scientists diverge in their assessment. The article ends discussing what these findings imply for further improvement of interdisciplinary marine science
Original languageEnglish
JournalMarine Policy
Volume60
Pages (from-to)197-201
ISSN0308-597X
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2015

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