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Dive into the research topics where Lida Teneva is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Lida Teneva.


PLOS ONE | 2015

From Reef to Table: Social and Ecological Factors Affecting Coral Reef Fisheries, Artisanal Seafood Supply Chains, and Seafood Security.

John N. Kittinger; Lida Teneva; Haruko Koike; Kostantinos A. Stamoulis; Daniela S. Kittinger; Kirsten L.L. Oleson; Eric J. Conklin; Mahana Gomes; Bart Wilcox; Alan M. Friedlander

Ocean and coastal ecosystems provide critical fisheries, coastal protection, and cultural benefits to communities worldwide, but these services are diminishing due to local and global threats. In response, place-based strategies involve communities and resource users in management have proliferated. Here, we present a transferable community-based approach to assess the social and ecological factors affecting resource sustainability and food security in a small-scale, coral reef fishery. Our results show that this small-scale fishery provides large-scale benefits to communities, including 7,353 ± 1547 kg yr-1 (mean ± SE) of seafood per year, equating to >30,000 meals with an economic value of


Environmental Conservation | 2017

Opportunities and constraints for implementing integrated land–sea management on islands

Stacy D. Jupiter; Amelia S. Wenger; Simon Albert; Sangeeta Mangubhai; Joanna Nelson; Lida Teneva; Vivitskaia J. Tulloch; Alan T. White; James E. M. Watson

78,432. The vast majority of the catch is used for subsistence, contributing to community food security: 58% is kept, 33.5% is given away, and 8.5% is sold. Our spatial analysis assesses the geographic distribution of community beneficiaries from the fishery (the “food shed” for the fishery), and we document that 20% of seafood procured from the fishery is used for sociocultural events that are important for social cohesion. This approach provides a method for assessing social, economic, and cultural values provided by small-scale food systems, as well as important contributions to food security, with significant implications for conservation and management. This interdisciplinary effort aims to demonstrate a transferable participatory research approach useful for resource-dependent communities as they cope with socioeconomic, cultural, and environmental change.


PLOS ONE | 2017

Follow that fish: Uncovering the hidden blue economy in coral reef fisheries

Shanna Grafeld; Kirsten L.L. Oleson; Lida Teneva; John N. Kittinger

Despite a growing body of literature on integrated land-sea management (ILSM), very little critical assessment has been conducted in order to evaluate ILSM in practice on island systems. Here we develop indicators for assessing 10 integrated island management principles and evaluate the performance of planning and implementation in four island ILSM projects from the tropical Pacific across different governance structures. We find that where customary governance is still strongly respected and enabled through national legislation, ILSM in practice can be very effective at restricting access and use according to fluctuations in resource availability. However, decision-making under customary governance systems may be vulnerable to mismanagement. Government-led ILSM processes have the potential to design management actions that address the spatial scale of ecosystem processes and threats within the context of national policy and legislation, but may not fully capture broad stakeholder interests, and implementation may be poorly coordinated across highly dispersed island archipelagos. Private sector partnerships offer unique opportunities for resourcing island ILSM, although these are highly likely to be geared towards private sector interests that may change in the future and no longer align with community and/or national objectives. We identify consistent challenges that arise during island ILSM planning and implementation and offer recommendations for improvement.


Frontiers in Marine Science | 2016

Where Does River Runoff Matter for Coastal Marine Conservation

Alexa Fredston-Hermann; Christropher J. Brown; Simon Albert; Sangeeta Mangubhai; Joanna Nelson; Lida Teneva; Amelia S. Wenger; Steven D. Gaines; Benjamin S. Halpern

Despite their importance for human well-being, nearshore fisheries are often data poor, undervalued, and underappreciated in policy and development programs. We assess the value chain for nearshore Hawaiian coral reef fisheries, mapping post-catch distribution and disposition, and quantifying associated monetary, food security, and cultural values. We estimate that the total annual value of the nearshore fishery in Hawaiʻi is


PeerJ | 2017

Patterns in artisanal coral reef fisheries revealed through local monitoring efforts

David G. Delaney; Lida Teneva; Kostantinos A. Stamoulis; Jonatha Giddens; Haruko Koike; Tom Ogawa; Alan M. Friedlander; John N. Kittinger

10.3-


PLOS ONE | 2018

Estimating nearshore coral reef-associated fisheries production from the main Hawaiian Islands

Kaylyn McCoy; Ivor D. Williams; Alan M. Friedlander; Hongguang Ma; Lida Teneva; John N. Kittinger

16.4 million, composed of non-commercial (


Ocean & Coastal Management | 2015

Challenges, insights and perspectives associated with using social-ecological science for marine conservation

Pierre Leenhardt; Lida Teneva; Stuart Kininmonth; Emily S. Darling; Sarah R. Cooley; Joachim Claudet

7.2-


One Ecosystem | 2017

Marine and Coastal Cultural Ecosystem Services: knowledge gaps and research priorities

João Garcia Rodrigues; Alexis Conides; Susana Rodríguez; Saša Raicevich; Pablo Pita; Kristin M. Kleisner; Cristina Pita; Priscila Fabiana Macedo Lopes; Virginia Alonso Roldán; Sandra S. Ramos; Dimitris Klaoudatos; Luis Outeiro; Claire W. Armstrong; Lida Teneva; Stephanie Stefanski; Anne Böhnke-Henrichs; Marion Kruse; Ana I. Lillebø; Elena M. Bennett; Andrea Belgrano; Arantza Murillas; Isabel Sousa Pinto; Benjamin Burkhard; Sebastián Villasante

12.9 million) and commercial (


Collabra | 2016

Understanding Reef Flat Sediment Regimes and Hydrodynamics can Inform Erosion Mitigation on Land

Lida Teneva; Margaret A. McManus; Conor Jerolmon; Anna B. Neuheimer; Susan Jeanette Clark; Gordon Walker; Kolomona Kaho'ohalahala; Eric Shimabukuro; Chris Ostrander; John N. Kittinger

2.97 million licensed +


Ices Journal of Marine Science | 2017

When ecosystems and their services are not co-located: oceans and coasts

Evangelia G. Drakou; Linwood Pendleton; Micah Effron; Jane Carter Ingram; Lida Teneva

148,500-

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John N. Kittinger

Conservation International

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Kirsten L.L. Oleson

University of Hawaii at Manoa

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Simon Albert

University of Queensland

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