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Translating Climate Change Effects into Everyday Language: An Example of More Driving and Less Angling

Dates

Publication Date

Citation

Tyrell Deweber, and Tyler Wagner, 2015-08, Translating Climate Change Effects into Everyday Language: An Example of More Driving and Less Angling: Fisheries.

Summary

Climate change is expected to result in widespread changes in species distributions (e.g., shifting, shrinking, expanding species ranges; e.g., Parmesan and Yohe 2003), especially for freshwater fish species (Heino et al. 2009). Although anglers and other resource users could be greatly affected by changes in species distributions, predicted changes are rarely reported in ways that can be easily understood by the general public. In contrast, climate science that more directly affects human welfare or livelihoods is often more readily communicated to the general public because it is of greater concern or closely related to everyday life. Read More at http://news.fisheries.org/translating-climate-change-effects-into-everyday-language-an-example-of-more-driving-and-less-angling/.

Contacts

Author :
Tyrell Deweber, Tyler Wagner
Funding Agency :
NCCWSC

Attached Files

Communities

  • National CASC
  • National and Regional Climate Adaptation Science Centers

Associated Items

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Label
Wildlife and Plants
Water, Coasts and Ice
Science Themes
Types

Provenance

Data source
Input directly

Additional Information

Citation Extension

citationTypeJournal Article
journalFisheries

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