@article{25d776ff4c094b3883d222bbdb4fa8d0,
title = "Future Seas 2030: pathways to sustainability for the UN Ocean Decade and beyond",
author = "Pecl, {Gretta T.} and Alexander, {Karen A.} and Jess Melbourne-Thomas and Camilla Novaglio and Cecilia Villanueva and Nash, {Kirsty L.}",
note = "Funding Information: Riawunna Centre at UTAS provided advice and support for the Indigenous and Traditional working group, and the Future Seas project as a whole. Funding for Future Seas was provided by the Centre for Marine Socioecology, IMAS, MENZIES and the College of Arts, Law and Education, and the College of Science and Engineering at UTAS. We acknowledge support from a Research Enhancement Program grant from the DVCR Office at UTAS. GP was supported by an ARC Future Fellowship. We are grateful to the 130 participants within the broader Future Seas project who participated in the workshops described in this special issue and contributed to the development of the methods, and to the Managing Editors Robert Stephenson and Jessica Blythe for their valuable guidance. We acknowledge and pay respect to the traditional owners and custodians of sea country all around the world and recognise their collective wisdom and knowledge of our oceans and coasts. We are in particular deeply grateful to the Indigenous and Traditional working group for their time, knowledge, trust and collaboration. Thank you to David Finnigan and Jordan Prosser for their {\textquoteleft}Full Metal Aquatic{\textquoteright} art-science interpretation of the Future Seas special issue, and Dean Greeno, Bas K{\"o}hler, Stacey McCormack from Visual Knowledge, and Animate Your Science for artwork, images and graphical abstracts. ",
year = "2022",
month = mar,
doi = "10.1007/s11160-022-09705-y",
language = "English",
volume = "32",
pages = "1--7",
journal = "Reviews in Fish Biology and Fisheries",
issn = "0960-3166",
publisher = "Springer",
number = "1",
}