FN Archimer Export Format PT J TI Climate Change Will Re-draw the Map for Marine Megafauna and the People Who Depend on Them BT AF Grose, Susan O. Pendleton, Linwood Leathers, Amanda Cornish, Andrew Waitai, Sheridan AS 1:1;2:1,2,3,4,5;3:6;4:7;5:8; FF 1:;2:;3:;4:;5:; C1 Ifremer, CNRS, UMR 6308, AMURE, IUEM University of Western Brittany, Plouzané, France World Wildlife Fund, Global Science, Washington, DC, United States Nicholas School for Environmental Policy Solutions, Duke University, Durham, NC, United States Global Change Institute, The University of Queensland, Brisbane, QLD, Australia Ocean Data Foundation, Lysaker, Norway World Wide Fund for Nature, Wellington, New Zealand World Wide Fund for Nature, Hong Kong, Hong Kong Tribal Leader, Ngāti Kuri, Kaitaia, New Zealand C2 UBO, FRANCE WWF, USA UNIV DUKE, USA UNIV QUEENSLAND, AUSTRALIA OCEAN DATA FDN, NORWAY WWF, NEW ZEALAND WWF, CHINA TRIBAL LEADER, NEW ZEALAND UM AMURE IN WOS Cotutelle UMR DOAJ copubli-europe copubli-int-hors-europe copubli-sud IF 5.247 TC 20 UR https://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/00641/75354/76152.pdf LA English DT Article DE ;climate change;marine megafauna;habitat loss;disease;range shifts;prey AB Climate change is expected to dramatically alter the distribution of many marine megafauna, impacting the people and economies that depend upon them. We build on the recent literature by developing a framework to describe the effects these changes will have on marine megafauna. With the goal to assist policymakers and grass roots organizers, we identify three illustrative pathways by which climate change drives these range shifts: (1) effects on habitat and shelter, (2) impacts on reproduction and disease, and (3) changing distribution of sources of food. We examine non-climate factors that may constrain or enable megafauna to adapt, creating winners and losers both for the species and the people dependent upon them. Finally, we comment on what management strategies exist at international and local scales that could help mitigate these impacts of climate change so that we, as a global community, can ensure that marine megafauna and people can best co-exist in a changing world. PY 2020 PD JUN SO Frontiers In Marine Science SN 2296-7745 PU Frontiers Media SA VL 7 IS 547 UT 000548586500001 DI 10.3389/fmars.2020.00547 ID 75354 ER EF