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Nature-centric / THE OCEAN : A GLOBAL CHALLENGE AND A PLANETARY SOLUTION

Lexicon

TermsDefinition
AbyssRegion that constitutes the floor of the world’s oceans, with a depth of between 3,000 meters and 6,000 meters.
Source: Dictionnaire encyclopédique de l’écologie et des sciences de l’environnement, 2ème édition DUNOD, 2002, p.2.
Blue accelerationThe expanding drive of capital to industrialize the oceans and the seabed. Economic activity in the oceans is expanding rapidly and significant investments…drive the growth of existing industries as well as the emergence of new ones, covering an increasingly diverse range of activities. The Blue Acceleration
ushers in a ‘’new phase in humanity’s relationship with the biosphere, where the ocean is not only critical to sustaining global development trajectories, but is fundamentally altered in the
process.’’
Source : “The Blue Acceleration : The Trajectory of Human Expansion
into the Ocean,” One Earth, vol. 2/1, January 24, 2020 : https://doi.
org/10.1016/j.oneear.2019.12.016
Biosaline agricultureThe production and growth of plants in groundwater and or/soil rich in salt. Source: FAO, 2020, Biosaline agriculure : https://agrovoc.fao.org/ browse/agrovoc/fr/page/c_6b250bf9?clang=en
Marine Protected Areas‘’A protected area is a clearly defined geographical space, recognized, dedicated and managed by any effective means, legal or otherwise, to ensure the long-term conservation of nature and its associated ecosystem services and cultural values. Source: Geoconfluences. Glossaire, Aires marines protégées, 2021 : http://geoconfluences.ens-lyon.fr/glossaire/aires-marines-protegeesfrance-monde
AnthropoceneTerm proposed in 2000 by Josef Crutzen and Eugene Stormer to characterize the current geological epoch, which
is marked by the major and growing impact of human activities on the earth and the atmosphere, at all levels, including the global one.
The two researchers proposed the end of the 18th century as the starting date of this new era, a period that coincides with the first observations of the effect of human activities on the environment, in connection with the beginning of the industrial revolution.
Source: CRUTZEN, Josef; STOERMER, Eugene. The “Anthropocene”, Global Change Newsletter n° 41, 2000, pp. 17–18.
Aquaculture‘’Aquaculture is the set of activities of plant cultivation and animal rearing in continental or marine water with a view to improving production, involving individual or legal ownership of the stock being farmed. It includes fish farming (breeding of fish), shellfish farming (breeding of marine shellfish: oysters, mussels, clams, etc.), seaweed farming (cultivation of seaweed) and carcinoculture (breeding of crustaceans, mainly shrimp and crayfish).
Source : National Institute of Statistics and Economic Studies.
Aquaculture definition : https://www.insee.fr/fr/metadonnees/ definition/c1534
AquapreneurThis concept refers to all entrepreneurs in waterrelated sectors.
Source: The water network : https://thewaternetwork.com/_/
aquapreneurs/
AtmosphereThe outermost layer of the Earth, gaseous in nature and therefore constituting the outermost part of the ecosphere.
Source : Dictionnaire encyclopédique de l’écologie et des sciences de
l’environnement, 2ème édition DUNOD, 2002, p.52.
Other effective area-based conservation measures (OECMs)
These reflect a new conservation approach, distinct from protected areas, where conservation is achieved primarily as a by-product of another form of management.
A definition was agreed upon at the 14th Conference of the Parties to the Convention on Biological Diversity in 2018. It is ‘’a geographically defined area other than a protected area, which is governed and managed so as to achieve long-term positive and sustainable outcomes for in situ biodiversity conservation,
with associated ecosystem functions and services and, where appropriate, cultural, spiritual, social – economic and other locally relevant value.’’
Source : The Biodiversity Information System For Europe :https://
biodiversity.europa.eu/protected-areas/other-effective-area-basedconservation-measures
Common good or the commonsRefers to forms of collective use and management of a resource or thing by a community.
This notion allows us to move away from the binary alternative between public and private, by focusing more on equal access and the regime of sharing and decision making rather than on
ownership. The areas in which the commons can find applications include access to resources, but also to housing and knowledge. The commons are resources that are collectively generated by a
community according to a self-defined form of governance.
Source : Royal Institute for Strategic Studies, Strategic report 2019- 2020 : Towards a new development model ; Académie De Versailles; Centre des ressources en économie gestion, La gouvernance des ‘’
Biens communs ‘’ au service du ‹› Bien commun ‹› : https://creg. ac-versailles.fr/la-gouvernance-des-biens-communs-au-service-dubien-commun
BiodiversityAll natural environments and life forms (plants,animals, fungi, bacteria, etc.) and their interactions.
Source : Encyclopedia of the environement, what is biodiversity? :
https://www.encyclopedie-environnement.org/vivant/quest-ce-quela-biodiversite/
BioluminescenceIt is the production and emission of light by a living organism. This light comes from a chemical reaction of the
organism, which transforms chemical energy into light energy.
This phenomenon is observed in particular with marine organisms.
Source : Les horizons : Média d’intelligence écologique https://leshorizons.net/bioluminescence/#:~:text=La%20
bioluminescence%2C%20c’est%20la, notamment%20 aupr%C3%A8s%20des%20organismes%20marins
BiomassThis is the mass or weight of a set of living organisms. The biomass of breeders is calculated by multiplying the number of individuals of reproductive age by their weight.
Source : IFREMER. Glossaire, Biomasse : https://peche.ifremer.fr/
Glossaire/Glossaire/Biomasse
Biomimicry The biomimetic approach offers answers inspired by nature. It is therefore about imitating the living, its forms, its materials, its structures or its rules of operation to draw ingenious
solutions.
Source : CNRS Le Journal : https://lejournal.cnrs.fr/articles/tous-lesmodeles-sont-dans-la-nature
BiosphereRefers to the complex system that constitutes the association on the surface of the planet Earth of environments
with unique physico-chemical characteristics: ocean, atmosphere, upper layers of the lithosphere, with which all
living beings are associated. The biosphere is therefore defined as the region of the planet in which life is permanently possible and which contains all living beings.
Source : Dictionnaire encyclopédique de l’écologie et des sciences de l’environnement, 2ème édition DUNOD, 2002, p.95.
Blue biotechnologiesBlue biotechnologies are defined as science and technology application to the transformation
of marine resources by biotechnology processes and this for applications in the areas of health, cosmetics, agri-food, aquaculture, environment, …
Source : GUEZENNEC, Jean et all. Les biotechnologies bleues : l’insoupçonnable potentiel de l’invisible, in IFREMER, TAIKONA magazine de la mer, 22 p : https://archimer.ifremer.fr/
doc/00414/52540/53353.pdf
Blue Acceleration’A race between diverse and often competing interests for ocean food, materials and space’’.
Source: JOUFFRAY, Jean-Baptiste et all. The Blue Acceleration: The Trajectory of Human Expansion into the Ocean Crossref, Perspective volume 2, issue 1, p43-54, 2020, doi link: https://doi. org/10.1016/J.ONEEAR.2019.12.016 ; https://www.cell.com/ one-earth/fulltext/S2590-3322(19)30275-1
Blue-washingA term used to describe deceptive marketing that exaggerates a company’s commitment to responsible
social practices.Source : FRIEDERIKE, Vinzenz et all. Marketing sustainable tourism: the role of value orientation, well-being and credibility, Journal of Sustainable Tourism, August 2019: https://doi.org/10
.1080/09669582.2019.1650750
Bottom-upThe bottom-up (or sometimes horizontal) approach is when innovations and ideas emanate from the
bottom up to be transmitted to other components of the entity under consideration, with the top only playing the role of a transmission belt between the parties, or registry room. Source: Geoconfluences. Glossaire, ‘’ Top down ‹› et ‘’ bottom up‘’, 2020 : http://geoconfluences.ens-lyon.fr/glossaire/top-downet-bottom-up
Blue carbonRepresents the carbon stored by living organisms in marine and coastal ecosystems (mangroves, salt marshes, seagrass beds) and stored in biomass and sediments.
Source : IPCC, 2018: Annex I: Glossary [Matthews, J.B.R. (ed.)]. In: Global Warming of 1.5°C. An IPCC Special Report, 543p. doi:10.1017/9781009157940.008. : https://www.ipcc.ch/site/ assets/uploads/sites/2/2022/06/SR15_AnnexI.pdf
Climate change A variation in the state of the climate observable (by statistical tests, …) by changes in the mean and/or variability of properties that persists over an extended period of time, typically
decades or longer. Climate change may be due to natural internal processes or external forcings, including modulations of solar cycles, volcanic eruptions, or persistent anthropogenic changes in
atmospheric composition or land use. In the first article of the UNFCCC, climate change is defined as ‘’changes in climate which are attributed directly or indirectly to human activity that alters the composition of the global atmosphere and which are in addition tonatural climate variability observed over comparable time periods.
The Convention thereby distinguishes between climate change attributable to human activities that alter the composition of the atmosphere and climate variability attributable to natural causes.
Source : IPCC, 2018: Annex I: Glossary [Matthews, J.B.R. (ed.)]. In: Global Warming of 1.5°C. An IPCC Special Report, 544p. doi:10.1017/9781009157940.008. https://www.ipcc.ch/site/assets/ uploads/sites/2/2022/06/SR15_AnnexI.p
Choke pointDesignates a strategic passage in transportation. Key passages for maritime transport are narrow, shallow bottlenecks, the Achilles heel of the globalized economy. They are straits or
channels that entail a limit to ship capacity. Source : Geoconfluences. Glossaire, Choke point, 2021 : http://
geoconfluences.ens-lyon.fr/glossaire/choke-point
Thermohaline circulation or deep ocean circulationThe oceans constantly flow with great currents. This permanent circulation is the ‘’thermohaline circulation’’. In Greek, ‘’thermos’’ means temperature and ‘’halos’’ means salt. These currents are generated
and maintained either by differences in temperature or by differences in salinity.
Source : Geoconfluences. Glossaire, Choke point, 2021 : http://geoconfluences.ens-lyon.fr/glossaire/choke-point
ClathratesNanoporous organic crystals in which water molecules form cages that can encapsulate a large number of molecularspecies, the topology of the aqueous cages depends on the
nature of the guest molecules. Source : G. A. Jeffrey, in Comprehensive Supramolecular Chemistry,Hydrate Inclusion Compounds, edited by J. L. Atwood, J. E. D. Davies, D. D. Mac-Nicol, and F. Vögtle (Pergamon, Oxford) Vol. 6, p. 757 (1996).
Coccolithophore ‘’Emiliania huxleyi’’: single-celled calcifying marine algae that play an important role in the oceanic carbon
cycle via their cellular processes of photosynthesis (a CO2 sink) and calcification (a CO2 source). In contrast to well-studied and satellite-visible surface coccolithophore blooms, the lower photic
zone is a poorly understood but potentially important ecological niche for coccolithophores in terms of primary production and carbon transfer to the deep ocean.
Source : Laura Perrin, Ian Probert, Gerald Langer, Giovanni Aloisi.
Growth of the coccolithophore Emiliania huxleyi in light- and nutrientlimited batch reactors: relevance for the BIOSOPE deep ecological niche of coccolithophores. Biogeosciences, European Geosciences
Union, 2016, 13 (21), pp.5983-6001. 10.5194/bg-13-5983-2016.
Water column ‘’The water column is a concept used in oceanography to describe the physical (temperature, salinity,
light penetration) and chemical (pH, dissolved oxygen content, nutrient salts, trace metals…) characteristics of seawater at different depths for a given geographical point. This water column
extends from the surface to the bottom of the oceans and can be up to 11 km deep (the Mariana Trench in the Pacific).
Source: Source : CNRS. IFREMER. Geo Ocean. What is the water
column? https://www.geo-ocean.fr/en/Science-for-all/Ourclassrooms/Hydrothermal-systems/The-water-column
Concertation Refers to a mode of administration or governance in which citizens are consulted in order to debate and enrich a project. It includes a dimension of continuity and follow-up in the development of the project. It makes contradictory exchanges possible and promotes inclusive participation. Source : REVUE URBAINE. L’analyse préalable : A quoi sert la concertation ? : http://revesurbains.fr/wp-content/ uploads/2016/10/Guide-concertation_Lille_complet.pdf
ContainerizationThe principle of transporting various goods in standardized containers to facilitate transport and handling. Large
ports and multimodal platforms have adapted to the standards imposed by containerization: handling systems, adequate storage areas, etc. Source : GEOCONFLUENCES. Glossaire. Conteneur, conteneurisation,
Novembre 2020 : http://geoconfluences.ens-lyon.fr/glossaire/
conteneur-conteneurisation
Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of
Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES) or the Washington Convention
International agreement between States, adopted on March 3, 1973 in Washington. ‘’ It aims to ensure that international trade in specimens of wild animals and plants does not threaten the survival of the species to which they belong ‘’.
Source : the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species
of Wild Fauna and Flora. https://cites.org/eng/disc/what.php
Mixing layer (of surface waters)The mixing layer (or mixed layer) is the surface part of the ocean that is stirred by the atmosphere.
In the mixed layer, the physical properties of seawater (density, temperature and salinity) remain constant.
Source : IFREMER. Glossaire, milieu_physique, couche de mélange :
https://marc.ifremer.fr/glossaire/milieu_physique/couche_de_melange
Antarctic Circumpolar CurrentThe Antarctic Circumpolar Current is a major ocean current known as the Southern Ocean. It is the
only current that circles the Earth and connects the major oceans
of our planet.Source : CENTRE NATIONAL D’ETUDES SPATIALES(CNES). Le courant circumpolaire antarctique COURANT: http://argonautica.jason.oceanobs.com/html/argonautica/fiches/circumpolaire2017_
fr.html.
Atlantic Meridional Overturning Current (AMOC)Broad-based ocean circulation that brings warm, salty water into the high latitudes of the North Atlantic, where it cools, releases heat to the atmosphere, and eventually sinks to the deep ocean after a series
of complex oceanographic processes. Its impact on climate and biogeochemistry is equally global and complex, particularly due to large-scale atmospheric teleconnection patterns.
Source : Swingedouw D, Houssais M-N, Herbaut C, Blaizot A-C, Devilliers M and Deshayes J (2022) AMOC Recent and Future Trends: A Crucial Role for Oceanic Resolution and Greenland Melting? Front.
Clim. 4:838310. doi: 10.3389/fclim.2022.838310.
Population growthRefers to the growth of a population over time.
Source : François. Dictionnaire encyclopédique de l’écologie et des sciences de l’environnement, 2ème édition DUNOD, 2002, pp184- 185.
CryosphereRegion of the ecosphere that consists of polar ice caps and glaciers. Source : RAMADE, François. Dictionnaire encyclopédique de l’écologie et des sciences de l’environnement, 2ème édition
DUNOD, 2002, p.186.
Ocean Decade 2021-2030‘’The United Nations proclaimed the United Nations Decade of Ocean Sciences for Sustainable
Development (2021-2030). The initiative aims to mobilize the scientific community, policy makers, industry and civil society around a common agenda of research and technological innovation. The proclamation of the Decade is the culmination of efforts by UNESCO’s Intergovernmental Oceanographic Commission to foster international cooperation in ocean
sciences. Source : UN Decade of Ocean Science for Sustainable Development
(2021-2030) https://en.unesco.org/underwater-heritage/UNdecade
Ocean deoxygenation Refers to a loss of oxygen in the oceans, which is largely attributed to two main causes: eutrophication
due to nutrient runoff from continental areas and nitrogen deposition from fossil fuel use, and warming of ocean waters due to climate change.
Source : Union Internationale pour La Conservation de La Nature (UINCN). Ocean deoxygenation: everyone’s problem…summary for policy makers, 2019, 28 p : https://portals.iucn.org/library/sites/
library/files/documents/2019-048-Fr-Summ.pdf
Digitalization Digitalization refers to the use of digital technologies and data, as well as interconnections that give rise
to the birth of new activities or the evolution of existing ones. Source : OCDE.Going Digital: Shaping Policies, Improving Lives, Éditions OCDE, 2019, 168 p : https://doi.org/10.1787/9789264312012-en
E-bombIs short for ‘’electromagnetic bomb’’ a new generation electromagnetic weapon that was invented in the 1950s. The definition is very broad, but essentially covers all bombs designed to damage targets with a very intense pulse of electromagnetic energy. The main distinction lies in the wavelength of the energy
produced by the weapon. This bomb belongs to the so-called direct-energy weapon category – more precisely, to the ‘’high power microwaves weapon’’ (HPM) family. These weapons are
capable of producing an electromagnetic pulse (EMI) without a nuclear explosion.
Source : Kopp, Carlo, in Globalsecurity.org, 2003.
White Economy‘’The concept of a white economy is the economy created by young entrepreneurs of startups and digital
businesses. Douglas McWilliams, in his book ‘’The Flat White Economy,’’ uses the term white economy to refer to a new concept that is emerging that is focused on the digital world, where startups, small businesses and technology are gaining traction.’’ Source : MCWILLIAMS, Douglas. The Flat White Economy : How
The Digital Economy is Transforming London and Other Cities of the Future, Overlook Press, 2016, 256 p
Brown economy Economy based on fossil fuels (coal, oil, gas).This is the economic model implemented and promoted by
affluent countries. Impacts of this type of economy are pollution, waste, depletion of non-renewable resources and destruction of the environment.
Source : United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP).
Circular economyInvolves producing goods and services in a sustainable manner by limiting the consumption and waste of
resources and the production of waste. This model is based on the creation of positive value cycles with each use or reuse of a material or product before final destruction.
Source : National Institute of Circular Economy: https://instituteconomie-circulaire.fr/economie-circulaire/
Economy of the sea‘’The economy of the sea refers, as its name indicates, to sectors of activity related to the sea (maritime transport, fishing, offshore wind, marine biotechnology) but also refers to natural assets and ecosystem services from the sea (fisheries resources, shipping lanes, CO2 absorption, among others). Source : : The online library of the organization for economic cooperation and development (oecd). the ocean economy in 2030 :https://www.oecd-ilibrary.org/sites/8d846fcdfr/index. html?itemId=/content/component/8d846fcd-fr.
Predatory economyIs a developmental stage of a society’s culture, reached when group members adopt a predatory (i.e.,
rapacious) attitude as a permanent and orthodox spiritual attitude; when struggle has become the dominant feature of a prevailing theory of life; and when common sense comes to judge people and things with a view to combat. The evolution is gradual, since the passage from a peaceful state to predation
depends on the development of technical knowledge and use
of tools. Source : Galbraith, J. (2006). La prédation économique moderne
: guerre, fraude d›entreprise et cruelle chimère des réformes du marché du travail. A contrario, 4, 90-98. https://doi.org/10.3917/ aco.041.98; Thorstein Veblen, Théorie de la classe de loisir, Paris
: Gallimard, 1970 (1re éd. américaine : The Theory of the Leisure Class, New York : Macmillan, 1899).
Red economyThe red economy is, according to Gunter PAULI, characterized by waste, indebtedness and unemployment of
some for the enrichment of others. This economy ‘’borrows
from everyone and everything, from nature, from humanity, without thinking of repaying one day’’.
Source : PAULI, Gunter. L’économie bleue 3.0, Édition revue et
Augmentée, L’OBSERVATOIRE, 2019, 496 p.
Green economyAccording to the United Nations Environment
Programme (UNEP), the green economy is an economy that
leads to improved human well-being and social equity, while
significantly reducing environmental risks and resource scarcity.
Source : United Nations Environment Programme UNEP, PAULI,
Gunter L’économie bleue 3.0, Édition revue et Augmentée,
L’OBSERVATOIRE, 2019, 496 p.
Ecotone Buffer zone enabling the description of complex (and
often moving) ecological functions in space and time (or ecological
transition zone between two ecosystems).
Source : GARON, David ; GUEGUEN, Jean-Christophe ; RIOULT, JeanPhilippe. Biodiversité et évolution du monde vivant, EDP Sciences,
2013, p. 70 ; Gilles Clément, Manifeste du tiers paysage. Petit livre
traitant surtout des écotones comme systèmes écologiques et aussi
paysages.
Harmful Algal Blooms Certain types of phytoplankton produce
strong toxins or poisons. When their numbers increase, this is
referred to as a ‘’harmful algal bloom’’.
Source : The Pacific Community (SPC) ; LMMA Network,
Efflorescences d’algues nuisibles ,Fiche d’information
pour les communautés de pêcheurs ≠ 28, 2 p : https://
spccfpstore1.blob.core.windows.net/digitallibrary-docs/
files/16/16dd62a332cb974770b0496d4861bd3f.
pdf?sv=2015-12-11&sr=b&sig=XwbkdiICOevGC7Cqn
PpH7qoOeVmpDkbSnkCmIJPvfS0%3D&se=2023-03-
21T12%3A14%3A15Z&sp=r&rscc=public%2C%20
max-age%3D864000%2C%20maxstale%3D86400&rsct=application%2Fpdf&rscd=inline%3B%20
filename%3D%22Anon_13_ISFC_28_Harmful_algae_VF.pdf%22
Existential stakes or risks: ’Risks that could lead to the extinction
of humanity or the collapse of civilization. This reflects the
realization that mankind’s capacity to cause its own extinction is
now effective.
Source : Royal Institute for Strategic Studies, Strategic report 2021
: Towards a new post-COVID-19 World ? . https://www.ires.ma/en/
publications-english/general-reports/7653-strategic-report-2021-
towards-a-new-post-covid-19-world.html
Invasive species or invasive alien species (IAS) These are species
introduced (voluntarily or accidentally) by humans into a new
territory outside their natural range, whose establishment and
spread threaten ecosystems, habitats or native species with
negative consequences on ecological and/or socio-economic
and/or health services.
Source : COMITÉ FRANÇAIS DE L’UNION INTERNATIONALE
POUR LA CONSERVATION DE LA NATURE, UICN France, Les
espèces exotiques envahissantes sur les sites d’entreprises. Livret 1
: Connaissances et recommandations générales, Paris, France, 2015,
40 p : https://uicn.fr/wp-content/uploads/2016/09/UICN_Guide_
EEE_entreprises_L1.pdf
Crowdfunding Or participative financing, was developed in
2008 during the economic and financial crisis. Crowdfunding
is a collaborative financing method that allows project leaders
to find funding from savers (most often individuals) via Internet
platforms. It relies on the dissemination of information and
sponsorship through social networks.
Source : HEMDANE Thameur, ‘’ Le crowdfunding, une innovation
pour financer le développement du Maroc ‘’, Techniques Financières
et Développement, 2016/3-4 (n° 124), p. 27-34. DOI : 10.3917/
tfd.124.0027. URL : https://www.cairn.info/revue-techniquesfinancieres-et-developpement-2016-3-page-27.htm
Geoeconomics At the intersection of economics and
international relations, geoeconomics studies the relationship
between power and space, outside of territorial borders.
Source : LOROT, Pascal. ‘’ De la géopolitique à la
géoéconomie ‘’, Géoéconomie, 2009/3 (n° 50), p. 9-19. DOI :
10.3917/geoec.050.0009. URL : https://www.cairn.info/revuegeoeconomie-2009-3-page-9.htm
GeomorphologyA branch of geography that studies landforms,
particularly the role of erosion in landscape formation.
Source : Geoconfluences. Glossaire, Géomorphologie,
Avril 2021 : http://geoconfluences.ens-lyon.fr/glossaire/
geomorphologie#:~:text=La%20g%C3%A9omorphologie%20
est%20une%20branche,dans%20la%20formation%20des%20
paysages
Integrated Coastal Zone Management (ICZM)This concept
is fairly recent (1980-1990). Contrary to previous approaches
that were based on specific sectors of the economy, ICZM
is an approach to governance that integrates all sectors of
activity that affect the coastal zone and its resources, and that
simultaneously considers social, economic and environmental
aspects. ICZM implies the creation of a new level of governance
at the heart of which lies civil society participation.
Source : VANDERLINDEN, Paul. La gestion intégrée de la zone
côtière , in Université Virtuelle Environnement et Développement
durable (UVED) : https://ressources.uved.fr/Grains_Module3/GIZC/
site/html/GIZC/GIZC.html
Ocean gyre An ocean gyre is a large system of circular ocean
currents formed by global winds and forces created by the Earth’s
rotation. There are three main types of ocean gyres: tropical,
subtropical and subpolar.
Source : NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC. Ocean Gyre: https://education.
nationalgeographic.org/resource/ocean-gyre
Great Acceleration (of human activities)Period from the 1950s
onwards during which all socio-economic trends (demography,
consumption, industrial production) accelerated significantly.
Source : ANTROPOCENE : https://www.anthropocene.info/greatacceleration.php
HinterlandLand area linked to the port by major communication
networks. The hinterland is the area of attraction and continental
service of the port, in economic terms. It is also the continental
market area.
Source : GEOCONFLUENCES. Glossaire, Arrière-pays et avant-pays
(hinterland, foreland), Mars 2021 :
http://geoconfluences.ens-lyon.fr/glossaire/arriere-pays-et-avantpays-hinterland-foreland#:~:text=L’arri%C3%A8re%2Dpays%20
(hinterland,son%20aire%20de%20march%C3%A9%20continentale
HypoxiaHypoxia in marine waters – a lack of dissolved oxygen
– is a growing problem that can have serious impacts on marine
environments and ecosystems. Oxygen depletion in seawater
is currently considered one of the likely consequences of global
warming, as warmer water contains less oxygen. Hypoxia can
occur naturally. It can also be exacerbated by human activity or
caused directly by it.
Source : Governement of Canada, Hypoxia: https://www.dfo-mpo.
gc.ca/oceans/publications/soto-rceo/2012/page03-eng.html
Shipbuilding industryAll activities involved in the design,
construction, repair and maintenance of ships.
Source : OBSERVATOIRE DE LA PARITAIRE DE LA METALLURGIE.
Naval & Énergies Marines Renouvelables : https://www.
observatoire-metallurgie.fr/secteurs/naval-energiesmarines-renouvelables#:~:text=L’industrie%20navale%20
fran%C3%A7aise%20regroupe,et%20la%20maintenance%20
des%20navires.
Artificial intelligenceRefers to the ability of a machine to
reproduce human-related behaviors, such as reasoning, planning
and creativity..
Source : European Parliament. Artificial intelligence: definition
and use : https://www.europarl.europa.eu/news/fr/headlines/
society/20200827STO85804/intelligence-artificielle-definition-etutilisation
Interface Zone of contact between two differentiated spaces
that generates exchange processes between them.
Source : GEOCONFLUENCES. Glossaire. Interface : http://
geoconfluences.ens-lyon.fr/glossaire/interface-1
Internet of ThingsA network of objects with clear identifiers,
equipped with intelligent software, fitted with sensors and
constantly connected to the internet. It enables these objects
to exchange information with the manufacturer, the operator
or other objects connected to the internet. It makes physical
objects detectable and allows them to be controlled remotely, via
the Internet, thus enhancing the integration between IT systems
and the physical world. The economic world as well as technical
experts agree on the exponential increase in the number of
objects connected to the Internet.
Source : RAYES, Ammar ; SALAM, Samer. Internet of Things: From
hype to reality – The road to digitization (2nde edition), Cham (Suisse),
Springer, 2019, pp. 1-3.
Intertidal Tidal is an adjective designating that which is relative
to the tide. Intertidal means that which is located between low
and high tide, i.e. the band also called the foreshore.
Source : GEOCONFLUENCES. Glossaire, Tidal, intertidal : http://
geoconfluences.ens-lyon.fr/glossaire/tidal
Overshoot DayCalculated by the Global Footprint Network, this
day marks the date by which humanity has consumed (ecological
footprint) all the resources that the Earth can replenish in a single
year (biocapacity).
Source : World Wildlife Fund Canada: https://www.wwf.fr/sites/
default/files/doc-2019-05/20190509_WWF-EU-Overshoot-DayLiving-Beyond-Nature-Limits_Report_WWF-min.pdf
Blue AmazonThe concept of Blue Amazon was coined by
Admiral Roberto de Guimaraes Carvalho in an article in 2004.
The Blue Amazon (Amazônia Azul) is the Brazilian maritime
space (Comissão Interministerial) that matches the surface of
the Amazon forest (Amazônia Verde). The primary focus of this
concept is the exploration and exploitation of natural resources
as well as their legal and, if necessary, military protection.
Source : Folha de Sao Paulo, www1.folha.uol.com.br/fsp/opiniao/
fz2502200409.htm ; GOMES DO CRAVO BARROS Jorge ; BARROSPLATIAU Ana Flávia ; COSTA DE OLIVEIRA Carina et al. ‘’ ‘’ Amazonie
bleue ‘’ et projection brésilienne sur l’avenir ‘’, Outre-Terre, 2015/1
(N° 42), p. 204-212. DOI : 10.3917/oute1.042.0204. URL : https://
www.cairn.info/revue-outre-terre2-2015-1-page-204.htm
LithosphereSurface region of the Earth’s crust, about 20 km
thick, made up of hardened layers, except in areas of magma
intrusion in the asthenosphere.
Source : RAMADE, François. Dictionnaire encyclopédique de l’écologie
et des sciences de l’environnement, 2ème édition DUNOD, 2002,
p.463.
Coastalization ‘’Coastalization is a process of concentration of
populations and human activities along or near the coastline. The
contemporary attraction of occupied coastlines is at the origin of
an increasing densification of developments and of competition
or conflicts between activities and actors. These activities
complement or exclude each other’’.
Source : GEOCONFLUENCES. Glossaire, Littoralisation :
http://geoconfluences.ens-lyon.fr/glossaire/littoralisation-oumaritimisation#:~:text=La%20littoralisation%20est%20un%20
processus,ou%20%C3%A0%20proximit%C3%A9%20des%20
littoraux.
Seafarers The term seafarers refers to persons employed,
engaged or working in any capacity on board a ship. A distinction
should be made between seafarers and non-seafarers. Salaried
or non-salaried seafarers are seafarers engaged in an activity
directly related to the operation of the vessel. While non seafarers
represent personnel carrying out a professional activity on board
more than 45 days of embarkation, continuous or not, over a
period of six consecutive months.
Source : Observatoire des Droits des Marins. Fiches pratiques. Droit
du travail maritime. Gens de la mer :https://www.obs-droits marins.
fr/fiches_pratiques/droit_du_travail_maritime.html?idFiche=21
Eutrophication Eutrophication is one of the most common
alterations of continental and marine waters. Triggered by
excessive nutrient inputs, eutrophication phenomena result
in exacerbated productivity of aquatic ecosystems. The most
well-known manifestations are toxic cyanobacteria blooms in
lakes and rivers, as well as green macro-algae blooms in coastal
areas. These phenomena generate major disruptions of aquatic
ecosystems and have impacts on associated goods and services,
on related economic activities and on human health.
Source : Expertise scientifique collective Eutrophisation, 2017.
L’eutrophisation : manifestations, causes, conséquences et
prédictibilité. Rapport d’Expertise scientifique collective, Rapport
CNRS- Ifremer-INRA-Irstea (France), 1283 p : https://mycore.corecloud.net/index.php/s/5PpOueQDXwdrXqt#pdfviewer
Freedom of navigationThe right of all vessels, boats, timber
trains and other means of transport by water to circulate freely
over the entire navigable area of the waterway, on condition that
they comply with the stipulations of the present regulations and,
where appropriate, with the supplementary or implementing
requirements which shall be established by bordering States.
Source : l’article 2 de la résolution adoptée le 14 octobre 1934 lors
de la session de Paris ; MUBIALA, Mutoy. Chapitre 4. La liberté de
navigation In : L’évolution du droit des cours d’eau internationaux
à la lumière de l’expérience africaine, notamment dans le bassin du
Congo/Zaïre [en ligne]. Genève : Graduate Institute Publications,
1995 (généré le 21 septembre 2022). Disponible sur Internet : books.openedition.org/iheid/1550>. ISBN : 9782940549221.
DOI : https://doi.org/10.4000/books.iheid.1550
HaliotropismIs composed of ‘’Halios’’ which refers to the sea
and haliotropism means to turn towards the sea and be attracted
by it. This phenomenon has transformed the coastline from an
empty territory to a crowded one.
Source : CORLAY, Jean-Pierre. Géographie sociale, géographie du
littoral, Norois, 1995, pp. 247-265 : https://www.persee.fr/doc/
noroi_0029-182x_1995_num_165_1_6623
HeliotropismThis term refers to the attraction the sun exerts
on populations that relocate.
Source : BRUNET,Roger.Les mots de la géographie, Reclus-La
Documentation Française, 1993, 470 p.
The French Research Institute for Exploitation of the Sea
(IFREMER)
Public institution founded in 1984, with an
industrial and commercial character (EPIC), placed under the joint
supervision of the Ministries of Higher Education and Research
and of the Environment, Energy and the Sea. It contributes,
through its work and expertise, to the knowledge of the oceans
and their resources, to the monitoring of the marine environment
and the coastline and to the sustainable development of maritime
activities. It has laboratories in some twenty sites in the three
major oceans: the Indian, the Atlantic and the Pacific. On behalf
of the State, it operates the French Oceanographic Fleet for the
benefit of the national scientific community.
Source : IFREMER : https://wwz.ifremer.fr/L-institut
IPBESThe Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on
Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services. It is an independent
intergovernmental body established by States to strengthen the
science-policy interface of biodiversity and ecosystem services
for the conservation and sustainable use of biodiversity.
Source : INTERGOVERNMENTAL SCIENCE-POLICY PLATFORM ON
BIODIVERSITY AND ECOSYSTEM SERVICES : https://ipbes.net/fr/
node/40
Mariculture Mariculture is often defined as marine aquaculture.
Some researchers limit mariculture to the cultivation of marine
plants and animals in the ocean itself. While others also include
brackish water species and include cultivation methods that take
place in salt and brackish waters that are not located in the ocean.
Source : European Environmental agency (EEA) : https://www.eea.
europa.eu/help/glossary/eea-glossary/mariculture ; SECRETARIAT
OF THE CONVENTION ON BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY. (2004).
Solutions for sustainable mariculture-avoiding the adverse effects of
mariculture on biological diversity, CBD Technical Series N°. 12 2004
MaritimizationProcess leading to the increased exploitation of
sea and ocean resources and the expansion of trade by sea, in
connection with globalization.
Source : GEOCONFLUENCES. Glossaire, Maritimisation : http://
geoconfluences.ens-lyon.fr/glossaire/maritimisation
Maritime globalizationImplies general ideas of common good, of
world heritage to be preserved, of the beneficial necessity to join
forces to exploit wealth, share resources and technologies. […].
Source : L’AMIRAL DUFOURCQ, Jean. Cité par MOTTE, Martin .In
‘’ La mer, entre mondialisation et fragmentation ‘’. Prospective et
stratégie vol 8, no 1, 2017, p .57-70. https://www.cairn.info/revueprospective-et-strategie-2017-1-page-57.htm
MENA (Middle East and North Africa) The acronym used to
designate a region of the world comprising North Africa and the
Middle East.
Source: WORD BANK: https://www.worldbank.org/en/region/mena
Mercator Ocean Non-profit corporation, founded and funded
by the five major French institutions involved in operational
oceanography: CNRS (Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique),
Ifremer (Institut Français de Recherche pour l’Exploitation de la
Mer), IRD (Institut de Recherche pour le Développement), MétéoFrance and SHOM (Service Hydrographique et Océanographique
de la Marine Nationale). It is in the process of becoming an
intergovernmental organization, providing oceanographicbased services of general interest, focused on the conservation
and sustainable use of oceans, seas and marine resources. This
organization has developed complex ocean simulation systems
(numerical models) based on ocean observational data (satellite
and in situ) that are capable of describing, analyzing and forecasting
the physical and biogeochemical state of the ocean at any time,
at the surface or at depth, on a large scale or for a specific area, in
real or delayed time.
Source : MERCATOR OCEAN INTERNATIONAL. L’organisation :
https://www.mercator-ocean.eu/about-mercator-oceaninternational/
MicronutrientsCompounds present in food, ingested in quantities
of less than 1g/day and which are not a significant source of
energy. They are essential because they are not synthesized by
the body and perform essential biological functions. They include
vitamins, minerals and trace elements.
Source : ESNOUF, Catherine ; FIORAMONTI, Jean ; LAURIOUX, bruno
(dir). L’alimentation à découvert, CNRS Éditions, Paris, 19 Octobre 2017,
Glossaire, p.303-313 , DOI : 10.4000/books.editionscnrs.10226 :
https://books.openedition.org/editionscnrs/10521?lang=fr
New Silk Roads (BRI)Strategic Chinese project aimed at
economically connecting China to Europe by integrating the
spaces of Central Asia through a vast network of road and rail
corridors. This term (Belt and Road Initiative or BRI in English)
replaced in 2017, in the official terminology, the expression ‘’One
Road, One Belt’’. This project includes more than 68 countries
with a total of 4.4 billion inhabitants, representing nearly 40% of
the world’s gross domestic product (GDP).
Source : GEOCONFLUENCES. Glossaire, Routes de la soie, nouvelle
route de la soie : http://geoconfluences.ens-lyon.fr/glossaire/routesde-la-soie
Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)Also known as the Global
Goals, were adopted by the United Nations in 2015. They are a
global call to action to eradicate poverty, protect the Planet and
ensure that all people live in peace and prosperity by 2030. The
17 SDGs are integrated – recognizing that interventions in one
area will affect outcomes in others and that development must
balance social, economic and environmental aspects.
Source : United Nations Development Programme, What are the
Sustainable Development Goals? https://www.undp.org/sustainabledevelopment-goals
Oceanography’Oceanography is a science that studies the seas
and oceans, their limits and their interactions with the air, the
seabed, the continents and the living organisms’’.
Source : MÉDIATHÈQUE DE LA CITÉ DE LA MER DE CHERBOURG.
Dossier thématique. Avril 2012, p.4 : https://mediathequedelamer.
com/wp-content/uploads/dossier-oceanographie.pdf.
High seasAll parts of the sea outside the territorial sea or internal
waters of a State. The high seas being open to all nations, no
State may legitimately claim to submit any part of them to its
sovereignty. Freedom of the high seas is exercised under the
conditions determined by the present articles and by other rules
of international law. It comprises in particular, for the States
bordering or not the sea: the freedom of navigation; the freedom
of fishing; the freedom to lay submarine cables and pipelines; the
freedom to fly over it.
Source : Convention sur la haute mer. 1958, Genève. http://www.
fortunes-de-mer.com/documents%20pdf/legislation/Internationale/
Convention%20Haute%20Mer%201958%20FR.pdf.
Oceanology Term formed from -ocean and -logy. Neologism
dating from 1966. ‘’Methods, scientific and technical operations
implemented for the exploration, economic exploitation
or protection of the oceans. ‘’Oceanology’’ sometimes
corresponds to the definition of applied oceanography (for
services, industries), … Others explain that oceanology, as
opposed to oceanography, is not only to describe the ocean but
to understand its mechanisms’’.
Source : MÉDIATHÈQUE DE LA CITÉ DE LA MER DE CHERBOURG.
Dossier thématique. Avril 2012 : https://mediathequedelamer.
com/wp-content/uploads/dossier-oceanographie.pdf ; CHOMEL
DE VARAGNE, Bruno. L›océanologie : La recherche et la mer,
La documentation française, 1974, 280 p ; DE VARAGNES,
Bruno Chomel. L’océanologie : La recherche et la mer, – Paris : La
documentation française, 1974 (La documentation française
illustrée ; 280), 95p.
Ocean SphereTerm created in 1949 by the Russian V.N.
Stepanov, which means the so-called global ocean that includes
all the oceans and seas. It covers both hemispheres in a
heterogeneous way, that is to say 70,8 % of the surface of the
Earth (representing 97 % of the water on Earth).
Source : TOUCHART, Laurent ; BARTOUT,Pascal. FAUTIL CONCEVOIR UNE LIMNOSPHÈRE ? , ‘’ L’Information
géographiqueIn Armand Colin,pp.77-107 : https://www.cairn.info/
revue-l-information-geographique-2018-2-page-77.htm
OffshoreTerm that refers to activities that take place at sea,
without being related to fishing or maritime transport.
Source : LE MANUEL NUMERIQUE MAX. Géographie Tle,
Lexique, Offshore : https://manuelnumeriquemax.belin.education/
geographie-terminale/topics/geo-tle-t6c01-332-a_lexique
OMZOxygen minimum zone, also called hypoxic or ‘’dead
zone’’: ocean volume, at medium depth, in which the oxygen
content remains very low, even too low to sustain life.
Source : CAROL ,M Lalli,; PARSONS, Timothée R. Océanographie
biologique : une introduction. Oxford. ISBN 0-7506-2742-5,
1993 : http://www.sisal.unam.mx/labeco/LAB_ECOLOGIA/OF_
files/54210854-Biological-Oceanography-an-Introduction.pdf
Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP)The AsiaPacific Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreement (RCEP)
is set to become the largest free trade area in terms of economic
weight. Designed to further integrate the economies of Southeast
and Northeast Asia, the RCEP establishes strict requirements for
customs procedures, processes and performance.
Source : ORGANISATION MONDIALE DES DOUANES. Panorama,
L’accord global de partenariat économique régional en Asie-Pacifique
(RCEP) sous la perspective douanière
https://mag.wcoomd.org/fr/magazine/omd-actu-96/rcep-from-acustoms-perspective/
Illegal Unreported and Unregulated Fishing (IUU) is a general
term, which includes:
Fishing and related activities conducted in violation of national,
regional and international laws.
Non-reporting, misreporting or underreporting of information on
fishing operations and catches.
Fishing by ‘’stateless’’ vessels.
Fishing in areas covered by regional fisheries management
organizations (RFMOs) by non-parties.
Fishing activities that are not regulated by States and cannot be
easily monitored and accounted for
Source : Food and Agriculture Organisation of the United Nations, La
pêche illicite, non déclarée et non réglementée, 4 p : https://www.
fao.org/3/i6069f/i6069f.pdf
PermaquacultureIntegrated and evolutionary cultivation
system inspired by natural ecosystems. It is also an ethical
approach and a philosophy based on 3 pillars: ‘’taking care of the
Earth, taking care of humans and sharing resources fairly’’.
Source : SARTHOU,Jean-Pierre. Permaculture, in Dictionnaire
d’agroécologie : https://dicoagroecologie.fr/dictionnaire/
permaculture/
Small Island Developing States (SIDS) Include individual
countries with common characteristics and vulnerabilities such
as insularity, geographic remoteness, and small size of economy,
population, and area. These factors combine to make it clear
that functional, reliable, sustainable, and resilient transportation
systems – particularly maritime and air – are critical to the
development and survival of these countries.
Source : CONSEIL DU COMMERCE ET DU DÉVELOPPEMENT
COMMISSION DU COMMERCE ET DU DEVELOPPEMENT : https://
unctad.org/system/files/official-document/cimem7d8_fr.pdf
Phytoplankton ‘’Phytoplankton (from the Greek ‘’phyton’’ or
plant) is the group of planktonic organisms belonging to the
plant kingdom, of very small or microscopic size, which live
suspended in water. Specifically, it is the marine and freshwater
plant community that floats freely in the water and includes
many species of microalgae and cyanobacteria.
Source : PHENOMER. IFREMER. Glossaire, Phytoplancton :
https://www.phenomer.org/Informations/Pratique/Glossaire/
Phytoplancton
PhotosynthesisProcess by which plants and certain bacteria
use solar energy to synthesize organic molecules from carbon
dioxide and water.
Source : ACTU ENVIRONNEMENT. Dictionnaire de
l’environnement : https://www.actu-environnement.com/ae/
dictionnaire_environnement/definition/photosynthese.php4
Piracy According to the International Convention on the Law
of the Sea, an act of piracy refers to any unlawful act of violence
or depredation committed by the crew or passengers of a ship
against another ship, on the high seas or in a place not under the
jurisdiction of any State.
Source : L’ORGANISAITON MARITIME INTERNATIONALE :
h tt p s : // w w w . i m o . o r g / f r / O u r Wo r k / S e c u r i t y / Pa g e s /
PiracyArmedRobberydefault.aspx
PiscicultureMethod of raising freshwater fish for consumption.
Source : RAMADE, François. Dictionnaire encyclopédique de
l’écologie et des sciences de l’environnement, 2ème édition DUNOD,
2002, p.627.
Light pollution Light pollution is an anthropogenic phenomenon
associated with the development of urbanization and human
activities and which involves artificial light. From an ecologist’s
point of view, light pollution refers to artificial light that degrades
natural light cycles (day/night cycles and seasons), modifies the
nocturnal component of the environment, i.e. the illumination
of the environment, and consequently impacts the behavior,
biological rhythms and physiological functions of living organisms
and ecosystems.
Source : ENCYCLOPÉDIE DE L’ENVIRONNEMENT : https://www.
encyclopedie-environnement.org/vivant/limpact-ecologique-depollution-lumineuse
Chemical pollution: Pollution generated by unwanted
chemical substances in the environment as a result of human
activities – agricultural, industrial or urban. Chemical pollutants
include pesticides, endocrine disruptors, plastics, drug residues
and other emerging pollutants… As they cannot be eliminated
by the ecosystem, these pollutants have an impact on humans
as well as on fauna and flora. The most frequently observed
chemical pollution comes from the use of hydrocarbons, solvents
or pesticides; but one must also consider gaseous pollutants
that alter the atmosphere and ozone layer, thus accelerating
climate change. According to a study published in January 2022
in Environmental Science & Technology, the planetary limit of
chemical pollution has been crossed, exposing mankind to brutal
changes in its environment.
Source : NOVETHIC. Lexique, pollution chimique : https://www.
novethic.fr/lexique/detail/pollution-chimique.html
Noise pollutionNoise pollution affects the physical and mental
health of people, as well as the lives of urban animals. According
to some findings of the World Health Organization (WHO), noise
is the second most important environmental factor causing health
problems, right behind the impact of air pollution (particles).
Source : European Environment Agency Environmental noise in
Europe, 2020, 104 p : https://www.eea.europa.eu/publications/
environmental-noise-in-europe
ProchlorococcusThe single-celled marine cyanobacterium
Prochlorococcus is the most abundant photosynthetic organism
on Earth. These microbes are adapted to oxygen-rich, nutrientpoor oceanic conditions, with a fundamental divergence
between high-light and low-light ecotypes.
Source : ULLOA, Osvaldo ; HENDRIQUEZ-CASTILLO, Carlos ;
RAMIREZ-FLANDES, Salvador ; STEPHANAUSKAS,Ramunas.
The cyanobacterium Prochlorococcus has divergent lightharvesting antennae and may have evolved in a low-oxygen ocean,
Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, March 11,
2021 : https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2025638118 ;PENNISI,
Elizabeth ; Meet the obscure microbe that influences climate, ocean
ecosystems, and perhaps even evolution, March 9, 2017, In American
Association for the Advancement of Science : https://www.science.
org/content/article/meet-obscure-microbe-influences-climateocean-ecosystems-and-perhaps-even-evolution.
Primary productionSynthesis of organic compounds by plants
and microbes, on land or in the ocean, mainly by photosynthesis
using light and carbon dioxide (CO2) as energy and carbon
sources respectively. It can also occur by chemosynthesis, using
chemical energy, for example in deep sea vents.
Source : IPCC, 2019: Annex I: Glossary [van Diemen, R. (ed.)].
In: Climate Change and Land: an IPCC special report on climate
change, desertification, land degradation, sustainable land
management, food security, and greenhouse gas fluxes in terrestrial
ecosystems In press : https://www.ipcc.ch/site/assets/uploads/
sites/4/2019/11/11_Annex-I-Glossary.pdf.
Primary productivityThe synthesis of organic compounds
by plants and microbes, on land or in the ocean, primarily by
photosynthesis using light and carbon dioxide (CO2) as sources
of energy and carbon respectively. It can also occur through
chemosynthesis, using chemical energy, e.g., in deep sea vents.
Source : IPCC, 2019: Annex I: Glossary [van Diemen, R. (ed.)].
In: Climate Change and Land: an IPCC special report on climate
change, desertification, land degradation, sustainable land
management, food security, and greenhouse gas fluxes in terrestrial
ecosystems in press: https://www.ipcc.ch/site/assets/uploads/
sites/4/2019/11/11_Annex-I-Glossary.pdf.
Port grabbingGrabbing of ports by foreign powers: analogous to
land grabbing.
Source : PROGRAMME JUSTICE AGRAIRE DU TRANSNATIONAL
INSTITUTE (TNI) ; MASIFUNDISE DEVELOPMENT TRUST ET AFRIKA
KONTAKT : http://worldfishers.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/08/
The_Global_Ocean_Grab-FR.pdf
Ocean researchMeans any lawful study, research or other
scientific activity, whether basic or applied, designed to increase
knowledge of the marine environment for the benefit of mankind
as a whole, which is not undertaken directly for industrial or
economic purposes and which does not substantially alter the
surface or subsoil of the seabed and does not substantially affect
the marine environment;
Source : Law insider, marine scientific research definition : https://
www.lawinsider.com/dictionary/marine-scientific-research.
Fishery resources Fishery resources are composed of stocks
exploited by fishing and those resulting from aquaculture
activities.
Source : L’UNIVERSITÉ VIRTUELLE ENVIRONNEMENT ET
DÉVELOPPEMENT DURABLE (UVED). Introduction à l’économie de
l’environnement et des ressources naturelles, le cas emblématique
des ressources halieutiques : https://ressources.fondation-uved.fr/
introecoUVED/html/c2_p22_1.html
Ocean Sciencesaim to understand complex social-ecological
systems and services at different scales, through observations
and collaborative, multidisciplinary research’’.
Source : UNESCO. INTERGOVERNMENTAL OCEANOGRAPHIC
COMMISSION (COI-UNESCO). Global ocean science report:
the current status of ocean science around the world; executive
summary 2017, 19 p: https://unesdoc.unesco.org/ark:/48223/
pf0000249373_fre*
Food securityFood security exists when all people, at all
times, have physical and economic access to sufficient, safe and
nutritious food to meet their dietary needs and food preferences
for an active and healthy life.
Souce : Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), Les concepts de
sécurité alimentaire et leur aptitude à répondre aux défis posés par la
croissance urbaine : https://www.fao.org/3/ab788f/ab788f07.htm
Shoreface Transition zone between the continental shelf
and the shoreline, where waves (especially long-period waves)
begin to strongly interact with the seabed.
Source : HAMON-KERIVEL, Klervi ; COOPER, Andrew ;
JACKSON, Derek ; Sedrati, Mouncef ; GUISADO PINTADO,
Emilia. Shoreface mesoscale morphodynamics: A review. EarthScience Reviews, Elsevier, 2020, 209, pp.103330. ff10.1016/j.
earscirev.2020.103330ff. ffhal-02944352f : https://hal.archivesouvertes.fr/hal-02944352/document
SubsidiarityA principle according to which powers are delegated
to the level most relevant for effective action. The general
meaning and purpose of the principle of subsidiarity lies in the
granting of a certain degree of independence to a subordinate
authority vis-à-vis an authority at a higher level, in particular
a local authority vis-à-vis the central power. It is therefore a
question of sharing competences between different levels of
power, a principle that constitutes the institutional foundation
of states with a federal structure.
Source : BRODHAG, Christian et all. Dictionnaire du développement
durable, AFNOR,2004, p.213.
Top-downThe top-down approach reflects a traditional
understanding of power. Orders come from above and are
implemented at each level by a subordinate authority.
Source : GEOCONFLUENCES. Glossaire, ‘’ Top down ‘’ et ‘’ bottom
up ‘’ ,2020 : http://geoconfluences.ens-lyon.fr/glossaire/top-downet-bottom-up
Mass tourism Emerged as a result of the generalization of
paid vacations in many industrialized countries, the growth of
purchasing power in the 1960s allowing the ‘’masses’’ to travel
and support the economic sector of tourism.
Source : MERCIER, Mathieu. SITE PÉDAGOGIQUE. Territoire
touristique L’apparition du tourisme de masse : https://sites.
google.com/view/muniverssocial/g%C3%A9ographie-et-
%C3%A9ducation-%C3%A0-la-citoyennet%C3%A9/territoirer%C3%A9gional-le-tourisme
Turbidity’Turbidity is a measure of water clarity. It describes
the amount of light scattered or blocked by particles floating in
the water. These particles give the water an opaque or cloudy
appearance.
Source : DataStream. Un guide de surveillance de la qualité de
L’eau. La turbidité, 2021, 2 p : https://datastream.cdn.prismic.io/
datastream/9f7fd899-0728-47fd-9892-3f66dab05f5f_Turbidite.
pdf
Upwelling‘’upwelling of deep waters to compensate for a deficit
of surface waters. This phenomenon occurs primarily in tropical
waters and is caused by trade winds and strong cold currents
whose combined action pushes coastal waters offshore. The
upwelling causes an influx of mineral nutrients, which explains
the fertility of surface waters in plankton and small pelagics such
as anchovy and sardine.”
Source : IFREMER. Glossaire : https://wwz.ifremer.fr/peche/
Glossaire/Glossaire/Upwelling
Ocean Heat Waves Marines Heat Waves (MHW) unusual
warming of sea surface temperatures and surface layers of large
marine areas.
Source : Frölicher, T. L., Fischer, E. M. & Gruber, N. Nature, 15 August
2018 : doi: https://doi.org/10.1038/d41586-018-05978-1
VFloating cities (VLFS)Faced with an ever-increasing world
population, rising sea levels and threats to ecosystems, cities
must find new alternatives, such as floating cities. According
to UN-Habitat, ‘’a floating city is an aquatic city of some 10,000
inhabitants, fully modular, eco-responsible and autonomous in
terms of food and energy. It is capable of withstanding any type
of natural disaster (floods, tsunamis and category 5 hurricanes).
‘’The floating city concept is built around hexagonal platforms
of 20,000 square meters, each of which can accommodate 300
residents.’’ ‘’A floating city is not a luxury, it is a necessity’’ for
island countries whose very existence is threatened by global
warming and rising oceans.
Source : NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC. Les villes flottantes serontelles la solution à la crise du logement mondiale ? : https://www.
nationalgeographic.fr/environnement/les-villes-flottantes-serontelles-la-solution-a-la-crise-du-logement-mondiale;
Mud volcanoes and pockmarksSurface expression of mud
originating at depth. Depending on the geometry of the conduit
and the physical properties of the extrusive, the structure may
be a dome or a low topographic relief view.
Source : Mazzini, Adriano; Etiope, Giuseppe (May 2017). ‘’Mud
volcanism: An updated review’’. Earth-Science Reviews. 168:
81–112. Bibcode:2017ESRv..168…81M. doi:10.1016/j.
earscirev.2017.03.001. hdl:10852/61234.
Exclusive economic zone (EEZ) Strip of sea beyond and
adjacent to the territorial sea, extending up to 200 nautical
miles from the baselines. In this zone, the coastal State has
full sovereignty and jurisdiction for the purpose of exploration
and management as well as for the purpose of economic
exploitation of the natural resources (living or non-living) of
the waters above and below the seabed”.
Source : SENAT. Les zones économiques exclusives ultramarines
: le moment de vérité, ANNEXE 2 : GLOSSAIRE RELATIF À LA
DÉFINITION DES DÉLIMITATIONS MARITIMES (Convention
des Nations Unies sur le droit de la mer du 10 décembre 1982) :
https://www.senat.fr/rap/r13-430/r13-43011.html.
Intertidal zone The zone between the high tide and low tide,
also referred to as the foreshore, seashore, or littoral zone. The
is hence an environment where seawater and
air are interchanged repeatedly from the constant breaking
and receding of waves.
Soure : Source : Futura Science, Estran : qu’est-ce que c’est
? : https://sciencetrends.com/intertidal-zone-littoral-zoneephemeral-habitat/.
Subtidal zoneThe intertidal zone is an ecosystem found on
the marine coastline, where a multitude of shoreline organisms
survive the shifts from high to low tide. It is located on
marine coasts, including rocky shores and sandy beaches. The
intertidal zone experiences two different states: one at low
tide when it is exposed to the air and one at high tide when it
is submerged in water. The area is completely submerged by
the tide once or twice a day.
Source : National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration U.S.
Department of Commerce (NOAA) : https://oceanservice.noaa.
gov/facts/intertidal-zone.html. ; NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC.
Intertidal Zone : https://education.nationalgeographic.org/
resource/intertidal-zone.