First Section (from Fisheries Management and Ecology): Climate change poses major challenges for managing aquatic ecosystems. Managers must consider conditions that increasingly fall outside historical norms. This means that abiotic conditions may exceed the range tolerated by familiar species and lead to their decrease or replacement by species better suited to the new environment. In short, former ways of managing aquatic resources may no longer be applicable (Schuurman et al., 2021; Thompson et al., 2021). Fisheries managers have three options for dealing with climate change (Rahel, 2022). First, they can attempt to resist either abiotic changes (e.g., plant trees to reduce stream warming) or biotic changes (e.g., stock hatchery [...]