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Jérôme OLLIER

What happened to MH370? Prediction markets might give us the answer - @ConversationUK - 0 views

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    What happened to MH370? Prediction markets might give us the answer.
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    What happened to MH370? Prediction markets might give us the answer.
Jérôme OLLIER

Marine Protected Areas aren't necessarily the answer for ocean conservation - @SeafoodS... - 0 views

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    Marine Protected Areas aren't necessarily the answer for ocean conservation.
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    Marine Protected Areas aren't necessarily the answer for ocean conservation.
Jérôme OLLIER

Madagascar fishing villagers learn that the way to survive is not to catch fish - @guar... - 0 views

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    Blue Ventures conservationists show a struggling people that the answer is marine protection.
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    Blue Ventures conservationists show a struggling people that the answer is marine protection.
Jérôme OLLIER

How widespread is illegal fishing? Albatrosses are helping us with the answer - @EurekA... - 0 views

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    How widespread is illegal fishing? Albatrosses are helping us with the answer.
Emenac Incorporated

Why Have a Virtual Receptionist? - 0 views

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    Business owners take all possible steps to ensure customer satisfaction. One of the most successful and recommended strategies in this regard is to begin with a virtual receptionist service. This service brings in extra representatives for a business and eases the lives of the customers. When the customers have questions or queries to be answered or any problems to be solved, they try to reach the authoritative body telephonically and it is not uncommon for them for not having to been able to do so. This is where the need for virtual receptionists comes in. Virtual receptionists are basically persons who work for the customer support but do not work from the office or any specified location.
Jérôme OLLIER

Here are seven things to know about tropical cyclones - @CSIROnews - 0 views

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    As Queensland responds to another event-Tropical Cyclone Trevor-we've got some answers to a few of your cyclonic questions.
Jérôme OLLIER

Should Ships In India Switch to Shore Power? - @CarnegieMellon - 0 views

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    A team of EPP researchers has answered an important question about the shipping industry for a rapidly modernizing India.
Jérôme OLLIER

Biogeographic role of the Indonesian Seaway implicated by colonization history of purpl... - 0 views

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    As a bio]diversity hotspot, the East Indies (Coral) Triangle possesses the highest biodiversity on the earth. However, evolutionary hypotheses around this area remain controversial; e.g., center of origin, center of accumulation, and center of overlap have been supported by different species. This study aims to answer the evolutionary influence of the Indonesian Seaway on the biodiversity of the Coral Triangle by recovering the evolutionary origins of a wide-ranging ommastrephid squid (Sthenoteuthis oualaniensis) based on integrated molecular and oceanographic clues from the Indo-Pacific. Three new clades were revealed; viz., clade I from the South China Sea, clade II from the northern East Indian Ocean, and clade III from the southern East Indian Ocean. These two Indian Ocean clades formed a monophyly closely related to clade IV from the Central-Southeast Pacific. Clade VI from the central Equatorial Pacific and clade V from the northern Eastern Pacific sit in basal positions of phylogenetic trees. Ancestral Sthenoteuthis was inferred to have originated from the Atlantic Ocean and sequentially dispersed to the northern East Pacific, central Equatorial Pacific, and West Pacific through the open Panama Seaway and being transported by westward North Equatorial Current. The East Indian Ocean was likely colonized by an ancestral population of clade IV from the Southeast Pacific. Westward South Equatorial Circulation could have promoted transoceanic migration of S. oualaniensis through the wide paleo-Indonesian Seaway. Sea level regression since the Miocene and the closure of the Indonesian Seaway at 4-3 Ma were responsible for the population genetic differentiation of S. oualaniensis in the Indo-Pacific. Therefore, the Indonesian Gateway played an important role in influencing marine organisms' migration and population differentiation through controlling and reorganizing circulations in the Indo-Pacific.
Jérôme OLLIER

'Out of sight, out of mind' - towards a greater acknowledgment of submerged prehistoric... - 0 views

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    There is growing awareness of the need for greater acknowledgement of underwater prehistoric cultural resources as part of management and regulation of the seabed around many maritime countries, especially those with large indigenous populations and history such as Australia. Prehistoric cultural places and landscapes inundated by Post-glacial sea-level rise on Australia's continental shelf remain largely out-of-sight and out-of-mind, hence awareness and hence legal protection of this resource is lacking. There is a clear need for greater integration of archaeology and cultural heritage management within the marine sciences as well as a greater awareness of this resource as part of a common heritage more generally. This paper explores some of the dichotomies between Western and Indigenous cultures in valuing and managing the seabed. We argue that in developing science-policy, an attempt at least needs to be made to bridge both the gap between the nature and culture perspectives, and the jurisdictional divide between land and sea. Part of the answer lies in a convergence of Indigenous knowledge with Western science approaches, focused around our understanding of physical processes impacting past and present coastal landscapes and on the seabed itself. We explore several case studies from northern and Western Australia that are trying to do this, and which are helping to provide a greater appreciation of the inundated landscapes of the inner shelf as part of a common heritage.
Jérôme OLLIER

Pathways to integrate Indigenous and local knowledge in ocean governance processes: Les... - 0 views

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    The Introduction of this paper argues that current coastal and ocean management approaches like marine spatial planning (MSP) often do not adequately acknowledge and integrate Indigenous and Local Knowledge (ILK). This is problematic because how humans value and perceive coastal and marine resources is integrally linked to how they use and manage these resources, especially in adapting to social-ecological change. Coastal and marine resources are situated within complex social-ecological systems that are culturally, economically, historically and politically embedded. Therefore, management approaches have to integrate transdisciplinary and contextual perspectives in order to be relevant, sustainable and adaptive. Following extensive research in Algoa Bay, South Africa this article highlights several pathways to bridge the gap between existing ILK and current coastal and ocean management approaches. The Methods section discusses how the authors worked in tandem with a bottom-up (engaging with Indigenous and local coastal and marine resource users) and top-down (engaging with coastal governance authorities and practitioners) approach. In order to answer the primary research question "How can ILK be integrated into area-based ocean management like MSP"? the authors employed arts-based participatory methods as well as in-depth interviews and workshops with coastal governance authorities and practitioners over several months. This work then culminated in a one-day multi-stakeholder workshop which brought both ILK holders and coastal authorities and practitioners together to collaboratively identify pathways to integrate this knowledge into coastal and ocean management. In the Results and Discussion section the authors present and discuss five co-identified pathways to integrate ILK in coastal and ocean management which include: adopting contextual approaches to coastal and ocean management; increasing transparency and two-way communication between coastal authorities and
Jérôme OLLIER

Mining for answers in the ocean's archives - @NERCscience - 0 views

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    With a death toll of more than 250,000 people, the Boxing Day tsunami of 2004 was one of the most devastating disasters of recent history.
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