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ICCB 2013 Program - Society for Conservation Biology

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Marine <strong>Conservation</strong><br />

Room 306<br />

Thursday, July 25, 8:00 to 10:00<br />

08:00 Incorporating Climate Change and Ocean Acidification into Extinction Risk Assessments <strong>for</strong> 82 Coral Species<br />

C. Mark Eakin, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration; Russell Brainard, National Oceanic and Atmospheric<br />

Administration; Charles Birkeland, University of Hawaii at Manoa; Paul McElhany, National Oceanic and Atmospheric<br />

Administration; Margaret Miller, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration; Matt Patterson, National Park Service;<br />

Gregory Piniak, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration; Matthew Dunlap, University of Hawaii at Manoa;<br />

Mariska Weijerman, University of Hawaii at Manoa<br />

08:15 Trawler trash: recognizing the impacts of shrimp trawling on small fishes<br />

Sarah Foster, Project Seahorse, Fisheries Centre, The University of British Columbia<br />

08:30 Estimating sources of debris at a continental scale from coastal surveys<br />

Britta Hardesty, CSIRO; Chris Wilcox, CSIRO; Tina Lawson, CSIRO<br />

08:45 Pollution Canary - Albatross as Sentinels of Marine Pollution<br />

Wayne Sentman, Harvard University Extension School; A. E. Vo, University of Cali<strong>for</strong>nia - Berkeley; Myra Finkelstein,<br />

University of Cali<strong>for</strong>nia - Santa Cruz; Scott Edwards, Harvard University; Heidi Auman, University of Tasmania, Hobart,<br />

Tasmania, Australia; Michael Bank, University of Massachusetts - Amherst<br />

09:00 Marine protected areas: understanding social impacts through time in Indonesia<br />

Georgina Gurney, James Cook University; Robert Pressey, ARC Centre of Excellence <strong>for</strong> Coral Reef Studies; Joshua Cinner,<br />

ARC Centre of Excellence <strong>for</strong> Coral Reef Studies; Natalie Ban, University of Victoria; Richard Pollnac, The University of<br />

Rhode Island<br />

09:15 Persistence and management of the mutton snapper (Lutjanus analis) aggregating fishery at Gladden Spit, Belize<br />

Pablo Granados-Dieseldorff, Texas A&M University; William Heyman, Texas A&M University; James Azueta, Belize<br />

Fisheries Department<br />

09:30 <strong>Conservation</strong> on the High Seas -Rapid Progress in Defining Ecologically and Biologically Significant Areas<br />

(EBSAs)<br />

Piers Dunstan, CSIRO; Nicholas Bax, CSIRO<br />

09:45 MPA with Small No-Take Zones Produce Bigger and More Fish in Five Years: Case Study from Espiritu Santo<br />

Marine Protected Area, Gulf of Cali<strong>for</strong>nia<br />

Betsabé Luna Salguero, Sociedad de Historia Natural Niparajá, A. C.; Héctor Reyes Bonilla, Universidad Autónoma<br />

de Baja Cali<strong>for</strong>nia Sur; Nuria Torrejón Arellano, Sociedad de Historia Natural Niparajá, A. C.; Amy Weaver, Sociedad<br />

de Historia Natural Niparajá, A. C.; Israel Sánchez Alcántara, Universidad Autónoma de Baja Cali<strong>for</strong>nia Sur; Adriana<br />

González Azcárraga, Universidad Autónoma de Baja Cali<strong>for</strong>nia Sur<br />

Thursday<br />

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Symposium: Ecosystem-Based Management in Practice<br />

Room 307<br />

Thursday, July 25, 08:00 to 10:00<br />

Organizer(s):<br />

Heather Leslie, Brown University; Karen McLeod, COMPASS<br />

While ecosystem-based principles have been adopted as key elements of coastal and ocean management from local to the<br />

international scales, by governments and non-governmental institutions alike, critical questions remain: What knowledge,<br />

especially beyond the natural sciences, are needed to implement ecosystem-based management What can we learn from<br />

management in practice, particularly about translating knowledge to action Are these innovative, integrated approaches to<br />

managing human-environment interactions making a difference This symposium will bring together a diverse set of researchers<br />

and practitioners to engage in a spirited dialogue about the processes and outcomes of ecosystem-based management in practice,<br />

particularly in North America. Researchers will share results from these dynamic and varied social-ecological system experiments,<br />

and practitioners will offer their perspectives on how such scholarship has or could contribute to policy and management<br />

in varied settings. The goals of this symposium are 1) to communicate the diverse, interdisciplinary approaches being used<br />

to investigate ecosystem-based management in practice; 2) to translate the resulting research in ways that are salient across<br />

disciplines, diverse stakeholder groups, and socio-political contexts; and 3) to catalyze the next iteration of a synthetic research<br />

agenda <strong>for</strong> ecosystem-based science and management.<br />

08:00 Ecosystem-Based Management and the Federal Policy Landscape<br />

Erica Goldman, COMPASS<br />

150

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