Publications by authors named "Sailley S"

Microplastics (MPs) pollution has gained attention due to its ecological threats and potential economic impacts. Yet significant knowledge gaps remain in understanding MPs effects on marine organisms' physiology. This study quantifies the physiological impacts of MPs on farmed mussels (Mytilus galloprovincialis) across various locations in the Mediterranean Sea by combining a laboratory experiment with a Dynamic Energy Budget (DEB) model.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • * The study identified the challenges posed by climate change to Tanzania's artisanal fishing, marine protected areas, and seaweed farming, emphasizing the need for careful marine spatial planning to enhance climate resilience.
  • * By analyzing climate resilience and potential areas for growth over the next 20 to 40 years, the research suggests that effective strategies can help coastal communities adapt, create economic opportunities, and support biodiversity, but highlights the necessity of reducing global emissions to secure a sustainable future.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Tropical oceans are among the first places to exhibit climate change signals, affecting the habitat distribution and abundance of marine fish. These changes to stocks, and subsequent impacts on fisheries production, may have considerable implications for coastal communities dependent on fisheries for food security and livelihoods. Understanding the impacts of climate change on tropical marine fisheries is therefore an important step towards developing sustainable, climate-ready fisheries management measures.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Despite a growing interest in interdisciplinary research, systematic ways of how to integrate data from different disciplines are still scarce. We argue that successful resource management relies on two key data sources: natural science data, which represents ecosystem structure and processes, and social science data, which describes people's perceptions and understanding. Both are vital, mutually complementing information sources that can underpin the development of feasible and effective policies and management interventions.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Marine spatial planning that addresses ocean climate-driven change ('climate-smart MSP') is a global aspiration to support economic growth, food security and ecosystem sustainability. Ocean climate change ('CC') modelling may become a key decision-support tool for MSP, but traditional modelling analysis and communication challenges prevent their broad uptake. We employed MSP-specific ocean climate modelling analyses to inform a real-life MSP process; addressing how nature conservation and fisheries could be adapted to CC.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Antarctic krill, Euphausia superba, have a circumpolar distribution but are concentrated within the south-west Atlantic sector, where they support a unique food web and a commercial fishery. Within this sector, our first goal was to produce quantitative distribution maps of all six ontogenetic life stages of krill (eggs, nauplii plus metanauplii, calyptopes, furcilia, juveniles, and adults), based on a compilation of all available post 1970s data. Using these maps, we then examined firstly whether "hotspots" of egg production and early stage nursery occurred, and secondly whether the available habitat was partitioned between the successive life stages during the austral summer and autumn, when krill densities can be high.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF