Abstract
The Amur-Okhotsk Project (AOP) introduced a new global environmental concept referred to as the “giant fish-breeding forest” (GFBF) by expanding the traditional Japanese idea of uotsuki-rin (fish-breeding forest), which related upstream forests with the coastal ecosystem both physically and conceptually. The AOP found that primary production in the Sea of Okhotsk and the Oyashio region depended on dissolved iron transported from the Amur River and its watershed. Therefore, the Amur River basin can be recognized as the GFBF of the Sea of Okhotsk and the Oyashio region. This hypothesis presents new perspectives on global environmental issues: an ecological linkage between the continent and the open sea, relationships between stakeholders who are not necessarily depended each other in the system, and the identification of environmental common ground across coast lines and complex international boundaries. Multidisciplinary approaches are indispensable in studying and conserving the GFBF because stakeholders need to understand how to achieve a sustainable marine ecosystem in the Sea of Okhotsk and Oyashio region without limiting human activity on land. Connecting less dependent stakeholders could be a first step in coping with complicated environmental issues. We attempt to visualize socio-economic relationships inside the GFBF system to demonstrate how stakeholders are related to each other unconsciously. Establishment of the concept will help bring together people who have been separated for many years under political tensions.
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Acknowledgements
I would like to thank all of the project member for their tireless efforts in achieving the tasks of the project. I am especially indebted to my colleagues from China and Russia for their cooperation and understanding in conducting the project. Special thanks are given to 10 group leaders of the Amur-Okhotsk Project and the project secretary, Ms. Tamaki Kawaguchi, who supported me from the very beginning to the end of the project. The philosophy of the Amur Okhotsk Project was developed under the guidance of Research Institute for Humanity and Nature (RIHN) and I would like to express my sincere gratitude to the late Director of RIHN, Toshihiko Hidaka and the present Director of RIHN, Narifumi Tachimoto.
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Shiraiwa, T. (2012). “Giant Fish-Breeding Forest”: A New Environmental System Linking Continental Watershed with Open Water. In: Taniguchi, M., Shiraiwa, T. (eds) The Dilemma of Boundaries. Global Environmental Studies. Springer, Tokyo. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-4-431-54035-9_8
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