Social-ecological timelines to explore human adaptation to coastal change
Permanent lenke
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/14381Dato
2018-12-19Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Sammendrag
Through the construction of a socio-ecological
timeline for the Porsanger fjord ecosystem, this article
illustrates the different ways in which environmental and
social–ecological changes have influenced the adaptations
of rural households in coastal Sami communities in
Finnmark, north Norway. The main finding is that,
although environmental change in the form of seal
invasions and dwindling fish stocks directly impacted the
fisheries, the introduction of a new vessel quota system
decisively changed adaptive capacity and coastal Sami
household adaptation strategies. These changes represented
a tipping point for the social–ecological system in the
period between 1986 and 1990. It is thus important to
discuss the ways in which governance systems may
facilitate actions to adapt to climate and biodiversity
change and foster sustainable rural livelihood systems in
coastal Norway. Based on traditional and local ecological
knowledge on the state of the ecosystem prior to the tipping
point, two relevant actions to increase the resilience of the
system were identified: ensuring the possibility of re-entry
into fisheries as part of rural livelihood combinations, and
ecological restoration of kelp beds. Flexible diversification
of livelihoods allows exploitation of a range of adjacent
species without large investments in a fossile fuel-driven
fisheries economy. Investing in regrowth of macroalgae to
foster cod nursery areas and increase carbon sequestration
can be a relevant alternative for communities that are
interested in contributing to climate change mitigation on a
larger scale.