Shaping ecosystem based fisheries management

Funding programme
H2020
Project ID
PR-H2020-69
Key
RIDB_029
Acronym
SEAwise
Description
SEAwise will address the key challenge preventing implementation of a fully operational European Ecosystem Based Fisheries Management: the need to increase fisheries benefits while reducing ecosystem impact under environmental change and increasing competition for space. The SEAwise network of stakeholders, advisory bodies and scientists will co-design key priorities and approaches to provide an open knowledge base on European Social-Ecological Fisheries Systems. SEAwise will innovate the prediction of social indicators of small-scale fisheries, coastal communities, carbon footprint and human health benefits. Using these indicators in fisheries models will help give advice on economically effective and socially acceptable governance under climate change, productivity changes, and the landing obligation. SEAwise will link the first ecosystem-scale assessment of maritime activities’ impacts on habitats with the fish stocks they support. Using ecosystem effects on fishing, including environmental metrics, density dependence, predation, stock health indicators and habitat extent will improve stock productivity predictions. Estimating effects of fishing on sensitive species, benthic habitats, food webs, biodiversity and litter allows evaluation of the mutual consistency of objectives for ecological and social systems. Multispecies-multifleet models will provide ecosystem forecasts of the effect of fisheries management measures. SEAwise will identify the simplest possible combination of management measures and investigate portfolio diversification as an approach for managing ecosystem resilience and climate adaptation. SEAwise tools and courses for ICES, GFCM, stakeholders and decision makers will ensure that these methods can be used directly in Mediterranean, western European, North Sea and Baltic Sea waters. The predictions will inform an online advice tool highlighting stock- and fisheries-specific social and ecological effects and management trade-offs.
Lead entity
DANMARKS TEKNISKE UNIVERSITET
Lead Country
Denmark
Partners
TARTU ULIKOOL
THE SECRETARY OF STATE FOR ENVIRONMENT
FOOD AND RURAL AFFAIRS
HELLENIC CENTRE FOR MARINE RESEARCH
UNIVERSITE DE BRETAGNE OCCIDENTALE
COISPA TECNOLOGIA & RICERCA SCARL
ATHINA-EREVNITIKO KENTRO KAINOTOMIAS STIS TECHNOLOGIES TIS PLIROFORIAS
TON EPIKOINONION KAI TIS GNOSIS
CHRISTIAN-ALBRECHTS-UNIVERSITAET ZU KIEL
THE UNIVERSITY COURT OF THE UNIVERSITY OF ST ANDREWS
PARTIKAS DROSIBAS
DZIVNIEKU VESELIBAS UN VIDES ZINATNISKAIS INSTITUTSBIOR
MARINE INSTITUTE
EIGEN VERMOGEN VAN HET INSTITUUT VOOR LANDBOUW- EN VISSERIJONDERZOEK
JOHANN HEINRICH VON THUENEN-INSTITUT
BUNDESFORSCHUNGSINSTITUT FUER LAENDLICHE RAEUME
WALD UND FISCHEREI
INTERNATIONAL COUNCIL FOR THE EXPLORATION OF THE SEA
INSTITUT NATIONAL D'ENSEIGNEMENT SUPERIEUR POUR L'AGRICULTURE
L ALIMENTATION ET L'ENVIRONNEMENT
CEPESCA-CONFEDERACION ESPANOLA DE PESCA
INSTITUT FRANCAIS DE RECHERCHE POUR L'EXPLOITATION DE LA MER
POLITECNICO DI MILANO
FUNDACION AZTI - AZTI FUNDAZIOA
WAGENINGEN UNIVERSITY
MINDFULLY WIRED COMMUNICATIONS LTD
AALBORG UNIVERSITET
STICHTING WAGENINGEN RESEARCH
UNIVERSITY OF STRATHCLYDE
Partners countries
Estonia
United Kingdom
Greece
France
Italy
Germany
Latvia
Ireland
Belgium
Denmark
Spain
Netherlands
Start end date
-
Time frame
2021 - 2025
NBS type
Type 2
Societal challenges
New Economic Opportunities & Green Jobs
Climate Resilience
Approach
Other ecosystem-based management, Ecosystem-based adaptation
Environment
Coastal, Shelf and Open Ocean