Research on the Administrative Law Boundaries for Arctic Coastal States in Controlling the Impacts of Climate Change on Atlantic Salmon Resources
DOI: 10.23977/law.2025.040302 | Downloads: 4 | Views: 379
Author(s)
Zhao Xichen 1
Affiliation(s)
1 Ocean University of China Qingdao, Qingdao, Shandong Province, China
Corresponding Author
Zhao XichenABSTRACT
Climate change is profoundly changing the sea balance of nature between the Arctic and Atlantic Oceans. Atlantic salmon populations are facing multiple pressures such as habitat reconstruction, migration path shift and decreased survival of juveniles. There are significant faults in the current administrative law framework of the Arctic coastal states in dealing with the identification of transboundary ecological damage liability and the division of fishery management rights, there is no effective interface between the legal obligations of Arctic Council Member States and climate change adaptation legislation. In view of this, the study puts forward measures such as controlling coastal development activities by delimiting ecological red lines, establishing carbon sink trading mechanisms to promote transnational cooperation in emission reduction, and using satellite remote sensing technology to implement monitoring and early warning of migratory channels, this paper aims to break through the limitations of existing collaborative legal governance and provide institutional support for Arctic countries to build a climate-resilient fisheries management system.
KEYWORDS
Climate change control; Atlantic salmon stocks; administrative law boundariesCITE THIS PAPER
Zhao Xichen. Research on the Administrative Law Boundaries for Arctic Coastal States in Controlling the Impacts of Climate Change on Atlantic Salmon Resources. Science of Law Journal (2025) Vol. 4: 9-14. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/DOI: 10.23977/law.2025.040302.
REFERENCES
[1] Wang Zhiping, Li Jiaxun, Dave Fillion, Huo Yaoming, Zhou Wenhui Research progress on the impact of climate change on salmon richness and reproduction [J]. Marine Science, 2019, 43 (04): 98-104.
[2] Liang Xiongwei, Yu Hongxian, Liu Wei The impact of climate change on the habitat environment and related biology of salmon and trout [J]. Journal of Fisheries, 2011, 24 (02): 63-68.
[3] Zhou Mo, Liu Lianwei, Yu Wei Research progress on the life history process of squid and its relationship between resources and environment in the Northwest Pacific Ocean [J]. Bulletin of Marine Limnology (Chinese and English), 2025, 47 (01): 191-199.
[4] Crozier L G, Zabel R W, Hamlet A F. Predicting differen tial effects of climate change at the population level with life-cycle models of spring Chinook salmon[J]. Global Change Biology, 2008, 14(2): 236-249.
[5] Beaugrand G, Reid P C. Long-term changes in phytop lankton, zooplankton and salmon related to climate[J]. Global Change Biology, 2010, 9(6): 801-817.
Downloads: | 13378 |
---|---|
Visits: | 429120 |
Sponsors, Associates, and Links
-
Journal of Language Testing & Assessment
-
Information and Knowledge Management
-
Military and Armament Science
-
Media and Communication Research
-
Journal of Human Movement Science
-
Art and Performance Letters
-
Lecture Notes on History
-
Lecture Notes on Language and Literature
-
Philosophy Journal
-
Journal of Political Science Research
-
Journal of Sociology and Ethnology
-
Advances in Broadcasting