MAY 10-13: concurrent Topic Sessions following a morning Plenary Session, and a Synthesis Session
Topic Sessions will include contributed papers and (possibly) invited papers. Contributed papers will be selected for oral or poster presentations.
Duration: TBD
Format:
Keynote Talks, Invited Talk(s), Contributed Talks, Posters
Keynote: TBD-min time slot
Invited: TBD-min time slot
Contributed: TBD-min time slot
Convenors:
Tess Geers (Oceana), corresponding
Lis L. Jørgensen (IMR, Bergen, Norway)
George Grinson (CMFRI, Kochi, India)
Rob Stephenson (DFO (retired))
Yong Chen (Stony Brook University, USA)
Ingrid Van Putten (ACIAR)
Keynote Speaker 1: TBD
Keynote Speaker 2: TBD
Invited Speaker(s): TBD
Managing fisheries in an ecosystem context must be thoroughly grounded in broader systems of ocean governance, financing, and socio-ecological realities to be effectively implemented. Almost by definition, EBFM/EAFM requires bridging jurisdictions, embracing the diversity of stake- and rights-holders, and employing policy tools beyond traditional fisheries management. EBFM/EAFM must also navigate the complex policy contexts of the broader seascape of ocean uses, ensuring fisheries are effectively integrated alongside biodiversity conservation, marine spatial planning, and emerging marine industries.
This theme invites contributions on examples or advances needed in science, multi-lateral or transnational cooperation, or national governance to create the enabling conditions for effective EBFM/EAFM implementation. We particularly welcome submissions that focus on practical and tangible ways of incorporating EBFM/EAFM in broader ocean management conversations.
We welcome submissions that address enabling conditions within these areas:
Duration: TBD
Format:
Keynote Talks, Invited Talk(s), Contributed Talks, Posters
Keynote: TBD-min time slot
Invited: TBD-min time slot
Contributed: TBD-min time slot
Convenors:
Raquel Ruiz-Diaz (Uni. Washington, USA), corresponding
Kristin Kleisner (EDF)
Sukyung Kang (NIFS, Busan, Korea)
Erik Olsen (IMR, Nansen Project)
Alex Tilley (WorldFish)
Robin Davies (WWF)
Keynote Speaker 1: TBD
Keynote Speaker 2: TBD
Invited Speaker(s): TBD
Fisheries management was built upon the assumption of stationarity – an assumption we now know is incorrect. Climate change and other global environmental stressors are fundamentally reshaping marine ecosystems through shifting species distributions, altering predator-prey dynamics, disrupting productivity regimes, and rebalancing the tradeoffs between fisheries yield and broader ecosystem needs. Concurrently, the geopolitical seascape is shifting. In an era of rapid socio-economic change, evolving trade dynamics, and increasing global competition for ocean resources, fisheries must navigate both ecological volatility and political instability.
To deal with these unprecedented changes, we must embrace holistic management approaches. This theme invites contributions that outline approaches to document the impacts of global change and implement related management solutions for ecosystem assessments, bycatch evaluations, stock assessments, harvest advice, fisheries-dependent communities, and management decision-making. We aim to move beyond the question of whether to incorporate environmental information, focusing instead on the practical challenges of how to integrate uncertainty into advice and translate it into actionable management.
We particularly encourage contributions from diverse geographic contexts, including regions where fisheries are data-limited or grappling with the impacts of conflicts, geopolitical shifts, biodiversity degradation, and acute climate events.
We welcome submissions that address practical implementation within these areas:
Duration: TBD
Format:
Keynote Talks, Invited Talk(s), Contributed Talks, Posters
Keynote: TBD-min time slot
Invited: TBD-min time slot
Contributed: TBD-min time slot
Convenors:
Merete Tandstad (FAO, Nansen Project), corresponding
Chris Kelble (NOAA, USA)
Netsayi Mudege (WorldFish)
Sunil Mohammed (ICAR, Kochi, India)
JJ Cruz-Motta (University of Puerto Rico)
Keynote Speaker 1: TBD
Keynote Speaker 2: TBD
Invited Speaker(s): TBD
A persistent challenge for managing fisheries in an ecosystem context is the gap between what science can offer and what actually gets used in decision-making. While a rich diversity of tools is available—ranging from qualitative conceptual frameworks to fully coupled end-to-end models—implementation remains uneven across regions, governance systems, and data environments. This session puts the Global South front and center, while recognizing the value of looking at both the wide variety of EBFM/EAFM approaches side by side.
Things are working, and this theme aims to celebrate bright spots by highlighting the conditions, approaches, and real-world examples that have successfully bridged this gap. By comparing different jurisdictional and social contexts, we can better understand the enabling conditions, the challenges, and the different ways ecosystem-based thinking gets taken up or stalls. For example, multispecies fisheries in the US and EU often develop integrated regional plans that are constrained by historical legal frameworks focused on single-species management. In contrast, regions like SE Asia are often less constrained by single-species approaches and are deploying a wider, highly adaptable group of assessment methods and management measures. A central message of this theme is that managing fisheries in an ecosystem context does not require perfect data, perfect models, or perfect governance; it requires a suite of thoughtful, iterative, and participatory approaches that leverage available local, regional, and global knowledge.
We invite contributors to illuminate the path from theory to action, exploring how managers, scientists, Indigenous communities, and stakeholders work with available capacity to implement ecosystem approaches in real-world contexts. Specifically, we strongly encourage submissions from individuals directly connected to policy and management decisions in their countries – not just scientists and practitioners – who can take the integrating lessons that emerge from this session back with them to use in active management.
We welcome submissions that explore how we manage fisheries in an ecosystem context through the following areas:
Duration: TBD
Format:
Keynote Talks, Invited Talk(s), Contributed Talks, Posters
Keynote: TBD-min time slot
Invited: TBD-min time slot
Contributed: TBD-min time slot
Convenors:
Dave Reid (ICES), corresponding
Lynne Shannon (Univ. Cape Town, ZA)
Alida Bundy (DFO, Canada)
Omar Defeo (UNDECIMAR, Facultad de Ciencias)
Jacob Bentley (Natural England)
Scott Large (NOAA, USA)
Keynote Speakers Profiles:
Invited Speaker(s): TBD
While other sessions at this symposium focus on tactical implementation and enabling policy conditions, this theme takes a forward-looking view to explore new, novel, and emerging approaches to fisheries management in an ecosystem context. Because marine ecosystems and socio-economic realities are shifting rapidly, management must move beyond traditional paradigms to embrace innovative, adaptable solutions. In looking forward, we always need to consider lessons learned in the past that can help frame the forward view.
This session shifts the focus from historical retrospectives to the frontier of ecosystem-based management. We aim to explore cutting-edge performance measures, community-driven learning laboratories, and next-generation frameworks that are redefining how we approach fisheries management. We invite papers that challenge conventional approaches and provide a visionary outlook on advancing EAFM/EBFM. We challenge contributors to share novel methodologies, identify transferable lessons from emerging models, and demonstrate what a dynamic, adaptable vision for the future should look like.
A core premise of this session is that there are multiple ways to include ecosystem considerations into the management process, or even manage fisheries as an entire system, even if a system cannot swiftly shift its entire management paradigm. We hope to attract a wide range of ideas grounded in diverse geographies, and we challenge contributors to identify what has worked well (or not), what transferable lessons can be shared, and what a shared adaptable vision for the future should look like.
We welcome submissions that explore progress and vision through the following areas:
Duration: TBD
Format: TBD
This session will serve as the closing plenary session that seeks to synthesize findings from the symposium. It shall employ a few distinct mechanisms to do so, and will aim to set the stage for the next 20+ years of fisheries science and management, with an emphasis on stating the value and primacy of considering the ecosystem context.