November 26th – 28th, 2013

Program

Oral session at Inamori Hall

You can see all of program as pdf file(2013/11/05 updated)

>>CoHHO Symposium program20131105

 

Information for presenters  >>Guide for presentation

 

Program  (2013/11/20 updated)

26th November 2013

Opening address by Y. Yamashita (FSERC, Kyoto Univ.), 13:00-13:20

ORAL SESSION 1: Connectivity between ecosystems and its disruption, 13:20-17:10

Session 1 will focus on the ecosystem connectivity and subsidy in natural sciences. This session will explore the latest thinking and understanding of connectivity between terrestrial, riverline and marine ecosystems from a natural science perspective. Papers will focus on physical connections, species movements and life histories, genetic connectivity or others. Understanding these linkages across broad scales is critical for managing functioning ecosystems.

Chairperson: R. Tateno (FSERC, Kyoto Univ.)
Keynote  speech  13:20-13:50
John S.  Richardson  (Univ.  of  British Columbia)
Why  we  need  to  protect  the  forest-stream  connection  to  ensure  water security and ecosystem services
Chairperson: Reiji Masuda (FSERC, Kyoto Univ.)
1-1. 13:50-14:10
Yemi Akegbejo-Samsons (Dept. Agr. Fish. Management, Federal Univ. Agr., Nigeria)
Watershed and tropical rain forest management options in sub-Saharan Africa: Anecdote for climate change mitigation
1-2. 14:10-14:30
Hoan Hai (The University of Danang, Vietnam)and Le Hoang Son (Danang University of Technology)
Eco-Action 21 Implementation in Danang City, VietNam
1-3. 14:30-14:50
Khan M. G. Mostafa*, Cong-qiang Liu (Institute of Geochemistry, China), Takahito Yoshioka (FSERC, Kyoto Univ., Japan), Marco Minella, Davide Vione (Univ. degli Studi di Torino, Italy) and Daisuke Minakata (Michigan Technological Univ., USA)
Organic matter of hills and humans origin: Impacts on freshwater and oceanic ecosystems: Implications to Harmful Algal Blooms, Microbial Food Web, and Ocean Acidification from Source to Seas
1-4. 14:50-15:10
Nicolai Shadrin (Inst. of Biol. of Southern Seas, Ukraine)
A sea begins in the mountains: The Black Sea cases of the results from an altering of watershed connectivity by humans
15:10-15:30   Coffee Break
Chairperson: J. S. Richardson (Univ. British Columbia)
1-5. 15:30-15:50
Takuya Sato (Dept. Biology, Kobe Univ., Japan)
The importance of resource pulse timing to the response of aquatic ecosystems
1-6. 15:50-16:10
Lea A. Jimenez, Bernadette J. Nanual*, John Glenn P. Seniel, Ariel C. Eballe and France Guillian P. Bandigan (RIC XI, DOSCST, Philippines)
Biodiversity Assessment Along the Pujada Bay Corridors for Marine Protected Area Management
1-7. 16:10-16:30
M. A. Latif Siddique*, Claudia Baldwin and R. W. Bill Carter (Sustainability Research Centre, Univ. the Sunshine Coast, Australia)
Are adaptive management and co-learning evident in Moreton Bay Marine Park zoning Plans?
1-8. 16:30-16:50
Masanori Ishikawa*, Satoquo Seino and Hiroshi Tomida (Dept. Urban and Environmental Engineering, Kyushu Univ., Japan)
Horseshoe crab spawning site inprovement through watershed-level sand management and beach nourishment, Imazu Tidal Flat, Fukuoka
1-9. 16:50-17:10
Shaw Rajib* (GSGES, Kyoto Univ., Japan) and Noralene Uy (Independent Consultant, Philippines)
Ecosystem based Adaptation for Disaster Resilience: A Participatory Tool

27th November 2013

ORAL SESSION 2:Human impacts on watersheds and coastal ecosystems, 9:00-12:10

Session 2 will examine the environmental status of forest, river, coastal and marine ecosystems with regards to human use and impacts. It aims to understand the pressures that humans apply to ecosystems and impacts on their connectivity.

 

Chairperson: Tomoyuki Nakano (FSERC, Kyoto Univ.)
Keynote speech  09:00-09:30
Takayuki Shiraiwa             (Univ. of Hokkaido)
“Giant Fish-Breeding Forest” : a new environmental system linking continental watershed with open water
Chairperson: Hoan Hai (The Univ. of Danang, Vietnam)
2-1. 09:30-09:50
Makoto Tani (Dept. Agriculture, Kyoto Univ., Japan)
A Critical Role of the Forest Resilience in the Present Water Cycle
2-2. 09:50-10:10
Satoshi Nakada, Takashi Uenaka (Inst. Liberal Arts Sci., Kyoto Univ., Japan), Yoichi Ishikawa (Data Research Center for Marine-Earth Sciences, JAMSTEC, Japan), Katsuhisa Baba (Hokkaido Hakodate Fisheries Experiment Station, Japan), Koji Koyamada (Inst. Liberal Arts Sci., Kyoto Univ., Japan), Toshiyuki Awaji (Headquarters, Kyoto University, Japan), and Sei-Ichi Saitoh (Faculty of Fisheries Sciences, Hokkaido University, Japan)
An integrated analysis of land-ocean linkages to water circulations and cultured productions: A simulation study in Funka Bay, Japan
2-3. 10:10-10:30
Shizuka Hashimoto, Shogo Nakamura (Dept. Global Ecology, Kyoto Univ., Japan), Osamu Saito (Institute for Sustainability and Peace, United Nations University, Japan) and Ryo Kosaka (Graduate School of Human and Socio- Environmental Studies, Kanazawa University, Japan)
Land Account for Noto Peninsula from 1976 to 2006: Toward the Assessment of Ecosystem Services
2-4. 10:30-10:50
Md. Nazmul Ahsan*, Sk. Mustafizur Rahman (Fisheries & Marine resources Technology Discipline, Khulna Univ., Bangladesh) and Manjurul Karim (WorldFish, Bangladesh & South Asia Office, Bangladesh)
Evolution of coastal development policy and associated land use pattern in Bangladesh: a trajectory to lost connectivity in the debate over resource degradation and community rights
10:50-11:10  Coffee Break
Chairperson: Takayuki Shiraiwa (FSCNB, Hokkaido Univ.)
2-5. 11:10-11:30
Ngo Tung Duc (Hue University of Agriculture and Forestry, Hue University, VietNam)
Towards sustainable development of communities from mountains to coastal areas in Bo River Basin.
2-6. 11:30-11:50
Yemi Akegbejo-Samsons (Dept. Agr. Fish. Management, Federal Univ. Agr., Nigeria)
Wetland uses, community health and livelihood strategies in the Oluwa River Basin, Ondo Stete, Nigeria
2-7. 11:50-12:10
Silvia de Juan Mohan* (Estacion Costera de Investigaciones Marinas, Chile), Simon Thrush and Judi Hewitt (NIWA, New Zealand)
Increased variability in ecological connectivity as an early warning signal of stress in estuaries

 

ORAL SESSION 3: Solutions for functioning ecosystems: management for maintaining connectivity in human landscapes, 14:00-18:50

Session 3 will seek to understand how we can solve problems in environmental and ecosystem management by engaging people and addressing concerns about socio-economics and community issues. This includes watershed governance, coastal zone management and other approaches. We will focus on the connectivity issue and finding solutions for it while also exploring good case studies in management.

 

Chairperson: B. Nishimura (Univ. Brest)
Keynote speech  14:00-14:30
Denis Bailly         (Univ. Brest)
 An economic perspective on blue growth and conservation in the coastal zone
Chairperson: Huynh Trung Hai (Hanoi Univ. Sci. Technol., VietNam)
3-1. 14:30-14:50
Hebin Lin (Research Institute Humanity and Nature, Japan)
Connecting values: Payments for improving ecosystem services at the watershed scale
3-2. 14:50-15:10
Hossain M. Shahadat (University of Chittagong, Bangladesh)
Global Change in Local Place: An Assessment of Fishing Community Resilience to Climate Change at Hatiya Island, Bangladesh
3-3. 15:10-15:30
Mariana Core* and Maria de Lourdes Zuquim (Coll. Architecture and Urbanism, Univ. Sao Paulo, Brazil)
A critical analysis about the influence of the Pre-salt oil exploitation on the land use in Caraguatatuba, Brazil
3-4. 15:30-15:50
Shogo Nakamura, Shizuka Hashimoto (Dept. Agriculture, Kyoto Univ., Japan), Osamu Saito (Institute for Sustainability and Peace, United Nations University) and Ryo Kosaka (Graduate School of Human and Socio- Environmental Studies, Kanazawa University, Japan)
Historic changes of prefectural provisioning services in Ishikawa, Japan
16:10-16:30    Coffee Break
Chairperson: Ngo Tung Duc (Hue Univ. of Agriculture and Forestry, VietNam)
3-5. 16:10-16:30
Norie Tamura (Research Institute for Natural Capital Co.,Ltd, Japan)
The institutional and management aspects of ‘fishery forest’ movement -A case study of the tree-planting activity undertaken by the Notsuke Fisheries Cooperative
3-6. 16:30-16:50
 Mitsuyuki Tomiyoshi*, Ryo Kohsaka (GS of Human and Socio-Environmental Studies, Kanazawa Univ., Japan), Osamu Saito (Institute for Sustainability and Peace, United Nations University) and Shizuka Hashimoto (GSGES, Kyoto Univ., Japan)
 Designing a research framework of traditional and modern scientific knowledge on Satoyama and related agricultural and forestry biodiversity issues in Noto Peninsula
3-7. 16:50-17:10
Satoquo Seino* (Dept. Urban and Environmental Engineering, Kyushu Univ.,Japan) and Nobuyuki Azuma (Dept. Biol., Hirosaki Univ., Japan)
Local Studies and Formation of Watershed Management Social Systems on Ordinance of Aomori Conservation and Creation of Home Forests, Rivers and Coasts
17:10-17:30    Coffee Break
Chairperson: Akihide Kasai (FSERC, Kyoto Univ.)
3-8. 17:30-17:50
Hiroyuki Matsuda (Center for Oceanic Studies of Integrated Education, Yokohama National Univ. , Japan)
Marine Management Plan of Shiretoko World Heritage as an Ecosystem management
3-9. 17:50-18:10
Kenneth Kassem (GSGES, Kyoto Univ., Japan), Robecca Jumin (WWF-Malaysia, Kota Kinabalu, Sabah, Malaysia) and Yoh Yamashita (GSGES, Kyoto Univ., Japan)
Applying the Ecosystem Approach to Fisheries Management in Sabah, Malaysia
3-10. 18:10-18:30
Minlee Yap (Research Institute for Humanity and Nature, Japan)
The Road to Empowerment of PIFWA, a Fishermen Community
3-11. 18:30-18:50
Hiroshi Tomida (Dept. Urban and Environmental Engineering, Kyushu Univ., Japan)
Sharing Marine Litter Knowledge Framework with Watershed Environmental Conservation CBO Network along Tsushima Current

 

Concluding Remarks by T. Yoshioka (FSERC, Kyoto Univ.) , 18:50-19:10

Plenary session to elicit discussion and summarize the sessions and learnings.