Human activities are degrading marine ecosystems and undermining the ecological
functions and processes which provide valued goods and services. European
and UK marine policy developments aim to implement the Ecosystem Approach to
support better management of activities and maintain the health of regional seas.
Current public perceptions of the UK marine environment are overwhelmingly negative,
creating a barrier to engaging society with marine environmental issues and
policy.
This thesis conducts a study of the attributes of a suite of 72 UK marine species
to identify those which contribute most to marine ecological health. The findings
show that structurally complex species are most important and are recommended as
species to assess and monitor Good Environmental Status as defined by the EU Marine
Strategy Framework Directive. Existing conservation policies are biased towards
large vertebrate species, with ecologically important species being underprotected.
A survey of public perceptions of the marine environment. revealed conflicting
perceptions of charismatic megafauna. Charismatic species were the most interesting
species but least important as measures of marine health. Ecologically important
species were the least interesting, but ecological health concepts were considered
important measures of marine health. Perceptions of the marine environment varied
with socio-demographic and social value factors.
By integrating these studies, barriers and opportunities to engaging society with
the marine environment were identified. Communication strategies which address
these are proposed, including a suite of Spokes Species, potential high profile species
to champion the marine environment. These include puffin, cod, basking shark
and seagrass. A series of themes are proposed which implement other key findings
such as the importance of personal experience in building connections with marine
species. Communication strategies are supported by ecologically defined assessments
of marine environmental health, are relevant to current policy developments and will
resonate with social values of the marine environment.
Date of Award | 2010 |
---|
Original language | English |
---|
Awarding Institution | |
---|
Communicating Marine Environmental Health: Connecting Science, Social and Policy Values
Jefferson, R. L. (Author). 2010
Student thesis: PhD