Annualmeeting:2017 CSDMS meeting-073: Difference between revisions

From CSDMS
(Created page with "{{CSDMS meeting personal information template-2014 |CSDMS meeting first name=Robert |CSDMS meeting last name=Nicholls |CSDMS meeting institute=University of Southampton |CSDMS...")
 
No edit summary
 
Line 5: Line 5:
|CSDMS meeting city=Southampton
|CSDMS meeting city=Southampton
|CSDMS meeting country=United Kingdom
|CSDMS meeting country=United Kingdom
|CSDMS meeting email address=r.j.
|CSDMS meeting email address=Highfield Campus, University Road
|CSDMS meeting phone=+442380594139
|CSDMS meeting phone=+44 23 8059 4139
}}
}}
{{CSDMS meeting scholar and pre-meeting
{{CSDMS meeting scholar and pre-meeting
Line 16: Line 16:
}}
}}
{{CSDMS meeting select clinics2
{{CSDMS meeting select clinics2
|CSDMS_meeting_select_clinics2=3) Reproducibility and Open Science
|CSDMS_meeting_select_clinics2=5) Will not attend a clinic
}}
}}
{{CSDMS meeting select clinics3
{{CSDMS meeting select clinics3
Line 28: Line 28:
}}
}}
{{CSDMS meeting abstract title temp
{{CSDMS meeting abstract title temp
|CSDMS meeting abstract title=DELTAS AS COUPLED SOCIO-ECOLOGICAL SYSTEMS (invited talk)
|CSDMS meeting abstract title=DELTAS AS COUPLED SOCIO-ECOLOGICAL SYSTEMS
}}
}}
{{CSDMS meeting abstract template
{{CSDMS meeting abstract template

Latest revision as of 19:05, 13 March 2017






Browse  abstracts



DELTAS AS COUPLED SOCIO-ECOLOGICAL SYSTEMS

Robert Nicholls, University of Southampton Southampton , United Kingdom. Highfield Campus, University Road



[[Image:|300px|right|link=File:]]At a global scale, deltas significantly concentrate people by providing diverse ecosystem services and benefits for their populations. At the same time, deltas are also recognized as one of the most vulnerable coastal environments, due to a range of adverse drivers operating at multiple scales. These include global climate change and sea-level rise, catchment changes, deltaic-scale subsidence and land cover changes, such as rice to aquaculture. These drivers threaten deltas and their ecosystem services, which often provide livelihoods for the poorest communities in these regions. Responding to these issues presents a development challenge: how to develop deltaic areas in ways that are sustainable, and benefit all residents? In response to this broad question we have developed an integrated framework to analyze ecosystem services in deltas and their linkages to human well-being. The main study area is part of the world’s most populated delta, the Ganges-Brahmaputra-Meghna Delta within Bangladesh. The framework adopts a systemic perspective to represent the principal biophysical and socio-ecological components and their interaction. A range of methods are integrated within a quantitative framework, including biophysical and socio-economic modelling, as well as analysis of governance through scenario development. The approach is iterative, with learning both within the project team and with national policy-making stakeholders. The analysis allows the exploration of biophysical and social outcomes for the delta under different scenarios and policy choices. Some example results will be presented as well as some thoughts on the next steps.