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DEGREE REGULATIONS & PROGRAMMES OF STUDY 2013/2014 -
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DRPS : Course Catalogue : School of Geosciences : Earth Science

Undergraduate Course: Marine Systems and Policies (UG) (EASC10083)

Course Outline
SchoolSchool of Geosciences CollegeCollege of Science and Engineering
Course typeStandard AvailabilityNot available to visiting students
Credit level (Normal year taken)SCQF Level 10 (Year 4 Undergraduate) Credits10
Home subject areaEarth Science Other subject areaEcological Science
Course website None Taught in Gaelic?No
Course descriptionMarine (including coastal and ocean) environments are fundamental features of the Earth system that are profoundly influenced by human interactions. As these ecosystems are trans-boundary and multi-dimensional the policy instruments governing the utilization of coastal ocean systems are complex. However, policies, laws and regulations are often disconnected to the scale and dynamics of targeted ecosystems and species in both time and space (e.g. oceanographic processes, migratory species, multi-site life stages). Many global to local scale policies can be more effective, support deeper understanding of ecosystem processes, and take into account cumulative impacts of social pressures and environmental change, when viewed through an ecosystem lens from the past and looking ahead. Additionally, as technology advances, human population increases and energy demands combine to extend the horizons of marine exploration and exploitation further offshore, a more robust understanding of policies impacts and ecology responses in coastal-ocean realms is increasingly vital.

This course uses case studies to explore linkages between different scales of coastal-ocean ecosystem processes and ecological dynamics in connection with applicable scales of policy instruments t(e.g. Law of the Sea, Convention of Biodiversity, UNESCO World Heritage; regional conventions; Local codes and policies framed around fishing regulations, coastal zoning). Diverse case studies across a range of biomes, scales, and issues are considered to examine and test the suitability of different policies for different ecosystem scales, environmental issues and socio-cultural contexts. Examples of case study scales include: Archipelagos and Islands, Estuaries, Semi-enclosed Seas, Continental Margins, Urbanizing Shorelines and Global Oceans.

While most courses in GeoSciences are terrestrial in orientation, this course is unique as it focuses on marine ecosystems, issues and policies in an integrated way that provides focused, foundational learning for critical analysis of marine environments and human impacts. This course will help prepare students for positions in governments, NGOs, environmental consultancies and private enterprise requiring competency at the science-policy interface.

This course is co-taught as a 20c course for (PGT and 3rd year Ecology) and 10c for fourth year Env GeoScience and Ecology, with joint lecture sessions. There will be separate 10c and 20c level discussion groups. The 20c has extra journal response assignments. Group Presentations will be presented by 10c and 20c groupings, but all will attend. Both 10c and 20c will have individual policy position papers.
Entry Requirements (not applicable to Visiting Students)
Pre-requisites Co-requisites
Prohibited Combinations Other requirements None
Additional Costs None
Course Delivery Information
Delivery period: 2013/14 Semester 2, Not available to visiting students (SS1) Learn enabled:  Yes Quota:  21
Web Timetable Web Timetable
Class Delivery Information This course will run weeks 1-10 from 9am - 12.45pm
Course Start Date 13/01/2014
Breakdown of Learning and Teaching activities (Further Info) Total Hours: 100 ( Lecture Hours 24, Programme Level Learning and Teaching Hours 2, Directed Learning and Independent Learning Hours 74 )
Additional Notes
Breakdown of Assessment Methods (Further Info) Written Exam 0 %, Coursework 100 %, Practical Exam 0 %
No Exam Information
Learning Outcomes
On completion of this course, the student will be able to:
1. Ecosystem Learning Outcomes:
1. coastal-marine ecosystem processes, inter-dynamics and scales (e.g. global ocean, islands, continental margins, sub-intertidal);
2. human dimensions and drivers of environmental change in the marine environment (climate change, energy, fishing, species changes, urbanization);
3. pathways and scenarios for recovery, e.g. habitat conservation, restoration, enhancement, creation.

2. Policy Learning Outcomes:
4. key global and regional coastal ocean policy applications (CCFC, CBD, World Heritage, Ramsar, LOS, FAO, OSPAR, Barcelona);
5. key species and habitat policies (Habitats Directive, Endangered Species Act);
6. Exemplars of local governance, permitting, community management and traditional knowledge governance.
Assessment Information
Lecture/tutorial participation (unmarked), Group presentation (40%), Symposia Abstract Conference (unmarked), 2000-2500 word Policy Position Paper (60%).
Special Arrangements
None
Additional Information
Academic description This course will explore the linkages between different scales of coastal ocean ecosystem processes and ecological dynamics in connection with applicable scales of marine environmental policy instruments.
Syllabus The first part of the course examines diverse exemplary case studies illustrating a range of biomes, scales, issues through which suitability of different policies will be examined and tested. Building on these examples, students will conduct their own case-based ¿policy suitability and solution analysis¿ though small group presentations and an individual essay.

INDICATIVE SYLLABUS

(NB. May be some changes in order per speakers etc., and having group presentations spread throughout course TBD.)

Week 1. Course overview, goals and organization. Introduction to different realms of coastal-ocean ecosystems in the context of science, policy and management linkages, noting distinctions from terrestrial systems.

Week 2. Archipelagos, Atolls and Islands: Coral reefs and island habitats, World Heritage on island biogeography, ecology and cultures, connectivity across similar sites; sea level rise; habitat loss; cultural values, formal and traditional governance) (Micronesia, Polynesia)

Week 3. Continental Margins and Shelves : Offshore features, upwelling, seabed, seamounts, reefs; Policies targeting a balance of extractive activities with biodiversity conservation, e.g. fisheries, infrastructure, renewable, offshore exploration. (e.g. California, Scotland, Australia)

Week 4. Estuaries and Semi-enclosed Seas : Deltas, wetlands, shallow seas; Regional Seas policies on transboundary issues pollution, fisheries, land to sea based impacts. (e.g. NE Atlantic OSPAR, Red Sea - Jeddah Conv., Black Sea-Bucharest Convention, Mediterranean Sea Barcelona Convention.

Week 5. Perspectives and Approaches to Marine Policy Analysis and Case Study Design Tutorial.

Week 6. Urbanizing Shorelines: changes to intertidal-subtidal habitats over time in post industrial cities, ongoing incremental urbanization and new cities; Look at local codes, zoning, changes to shorelines, sea level rise, coastal protection drivers, and restoration vs. hybrid habitats vs. artificial habitats; (Seattle, Edinburgh, Barcelona)

Week 7. Global Oceans (climate change, temperature, acidification, migratory species, circulation; High Seas UNCLOS, global instruments (Climate Change Framework, Biodiversity Convention), (Antarctica, Galapagos)

Week 8. Peer Reviewed Group Presentations (Case studies by PGT students, peer reviewed by UG)

Week 9. Peer Reviewed Group Presentations (Case studies by UG students, peer reviewed by PGT)

Week 10. Abstracts Symposia session sharing overviews of individual policy papers.
(Individual Policy Essays due in Week 10).
Transferable skills - Capacity to conduct context based policy analysis to develop solutions for different settings and scales;
- Writing brief critiques and reviews of key literature and policies.
- Leadership and participation in group discussions on complex topics, scientific literature and examples;
- Team based oral presentations and participation in an Abstracts Symposia.
- Researching, constructing and delivering individual ¿white paper / position paper¿.
Reading list USEFUL BOOKS:
Nybakken, JW, Marine Biology - An Ecological Approach
Polunin, VC (ed) - Aquatic Ecosystems
Woodruff, CD, Coasts, Form, Processes and Evolution
Pinet, P, Oceanography - An Introduction to the Oceans
IPCC 2007: Working Group II, selected sections on coasts, regions, islands

INDICATIVE JOURNAL ARTICLES:
Bulleri, F and Chapman MG, 2010. The introduction of coastal infrastructure as a driver of change in marine environments. Journal of Applied Ecology Vol 47 (26¿35)
Carr, MH et al, 2003. Comparing marine and terrestrial ecosystems: Implications for the design of coastal marine reserves. Ecological Applications, 13 (1) Supplement, 2003 (S90-S107)
Clark, RC et al, 2010. The ecology of seamounts: structure, function and human impacts. Annual Review of Marine Science 2010 2 (253-78)
Crain, CM et al, 2009. Understanding and Managing Human Threats to the Coastal Marine Environment. The Year in Ecology and Conservation Biology 2009: Ann.N.Y.Acad.Sci. 1162 (39-62)
Doney, SC et al, 2011. Climate change impacts on marine ecosystems. Annual Review of Marine Science 2012 4:4 (4.1-4.27)
Hoffman, GE and Gaines SD, 2008. New tools to meet new challenges: emerging technologies for managing marine ecosystems for resilience. Bioscience Jan 2008 Vol 58 No. 1 (43-52)
Hoegh-Guldberg O et al (2011) The future of coral reef. SCIENCE 334: 1494-1495
Jackson, JBC et al 2001. Historical Overfishing and the Recent Collapse of Coastal Ecosystems Science Vol 293 27 July 2001 (630-637)
Jentoft, S and Chuenpagdee, R, 2009. Fisheries and coastal governance as a wicked problem. Marine Policy 33 (2009) 553-560.
Levin, LA and Dayton PK, 2009. Ecological theory and continental margins: where shallow meets deep. Trends in Ecology and Evolution Vol 24 No. 11 (606-617)
Levin, LA and Sibuet, M, 2011. Understanding margin biodiversity: a new imperative. Annual Review of Marine Science 2012 Vol 4 (8.1 ¿ 8.34)
Mills M, et al 2010. A mismatch of scales: challenges in planning for implementation of MPAs in the Coral Triangle. Conservation Letters 3 (2010) 291-303.
Molnar, JL et al, 2008. Assessing the global threat of invasive species to marine biodiversity. Frontiers in Ecology 2008 6 (9) (485-492).
Nicholls, RJ and Cazenave, A, 2010. Sea-level rise and its impact on coastal zones. Science Vol 328 18 June 2010 (1517-1520)
Orr, JC et al, 2005. Anthropogenic ocean acidification over the twenty-first century and its impact on calcifying organisms. Nature Vol 437 29 Sept 2005 (681-686)
Palumbi, SR et al, 2009. Managing for ocean biodiversity to sustain marine ecosystem services. Frontiers in Ecology 2009 7 (4) (204-2011)
Palumbi, SR et al, 2008. Ecosystems in Action: Lessons from Marine Ecology about Recovery, Resistance, and Reversibility . BioScience Jan 2008 Vol 58 No. 1 (33 - 42)
Ramirez-Llodra, E. et al, 2011. Man and the last great wilderness: human impact on the Deep Sea. PLoS ONE July 2011 Vol 6 Issue 7 (1-26)
Scheffer. M et al, 2001. Catastrophic shifts in ecosystems Nature Vol 413, 11 Oct 2001 (591 ¿ 596)
Thrush, SF and Dayton, PK, 2010. What can ecology contribute to ecosystem-based management? Annual Review of Marine Science. 2010. 2:419-41.
Study Abroad Not entered
Study Pattern Scalar case studies (ecosystem x policy x drivers) through: 6 lectures, 2 case-study design tutorials, 2 group (alternating, peer review) presentations, 1 in-class test, 1 out-of class paper
KeywordsMarine, coastal ocean ecosystems; biophysical processes and scales; marine policy and governance; cl
Contacts
Course organiserDr Meriwether Wilson
Tel: (0131 6)50 4311
Email: meriwether.wilson@ed.ac.uk
Course secretaryMrs Katie Leith
Tel: (0131 6)50 8510
Email: Katie.Leith@ed.ac.uk
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