Earthwatch lecture at the Royal Geographical Society, London, SW7 2AR, on May 
14th 2015, Turning the Tide: Coastal Communities and Conservation:
http://eu.earthwatch.org/events/2015/03/23/turning-the-tide-coastal-communities-and-conservation

The Lecture starts at 7.00pm.  Please book your free ticket at the link above.

Tropical coastal ecosystems such as coral reefs, mangrove forests and seagrass 
beds are some of the most biodiverse in the world and have essential economic 
functions.  More than 10% of the world's population rely on fisheries and 
aquaculture for their livelihoods, with global production almost doubling from 
the mid-1990s to 2012.  Yet threats to coastal biodiversity from 
over-exploitation and climate change could have profound implications on 
ecosystem function and human well-being.

Join us to hear how three leading scientists are working with local communities 
and stakeholders to find sustainable solutions for the long-term benefit of 
people and nature:

*         Professor Mark Huxham is Director of Academic Strategy at Edinburgh 
Napier University, the founding director of the Association for Coastal 
Ecosystem Services and leader of an Earthwatch research and conservation 
project in Kenya to restore mangroves - the first community based mangrove 
conservation project to be funded by carbon credits.

*         Professor David J. Smith is a senior lecturer in marine biology at 
the University of Essex and Director of the Coral Reef Research Unit; senior 
advisor to the Institute of Marine Environmental Research in the Aegean Sea and 
a fellow of the Royal Geographical Society.  He leads the Earthwatch coral reef 
research project in the Seychelles.

*         Professor Jennifer Smith is an Associate Professor in Marine Ecology 
and Conservation at Scripps Institution of Oceanography, California. She will 
be leading a new Earthwatch project looking at the ecological impacts of 
seaweed farming in Indonesia and the susceptibility of seaweed farms to 
environmental change.

Professor Martin Attrill, Chair of this event, is director of the Marine 
Institute at the University of Plymouth. Prof Attrill is a marine ecologist 
whose primary research interest is focused on the mechanisms behind long-term 
change and large-scale spatial patterns in marine assemblages and populations. 
He has been working with long-term data within a range of habitats such as the 
Thames Estuary, Brazilian coral reefs and the open Atlantic Ocean, including 
investigating the role of climate variation on fish, corals and plankton. He 
has published 100 papers in the prime literature, primarily on fish and benthic 
systems such as seagrass, and has current projects investigating the roles of 
Marine Protected Areas and their interaction with fishing (including a novel 
research partnership with the Blue Marine Foundation and local fishermen to 
undertake research into sustainable fishing with MPAs) and impacts of offshore 
renewable energy developments.

Please do circulate the link within your networks and tweet #EWtideturn

Any questions, contact Jenny Cousins at [email protected]

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