Abstract

Intergovernmental policy is targeting public ocean literacy to help achieve the societal changes needed to reach a sustainable ocean agenda within a 10-year timeframe. To create a culture of care for the ocean, which is under threat from Anthropocentric pressures, informed ocean citizens are central to upholding meaningful actions and best practices. This research focuses on recreational ocean users, specifically surfers and how their blue space activities may inform understanding of ocean processes and human-ocean interconnections. The Ocean Literacy Principles were used to assess ocean awareness through surfing interactions. An online survey questionnaire was completed by 249 participants and reduced to a smaller sample focus group. Qualitative and quantitative data were triangulated to develop further understanding of surfer experiences, using the social-ecological systems framework to model surfing outcomes. The results found that surfers indeed receive ocean literacy benefits, specifically three out of the seven Ocean Literacy Principles and that ocean literacy is a direct benefit many surfers in the sample group receive. By identifying synergies between the Ocean Literacy Principles, variables within coastal ecosystems and user (surfer) interactions, this research offers novel insight into opportunities for integrating ocean sustainability strategies through blue space activity mechanisms and coastal community engagement.

Highlights

  • The Anthropocene has imposed great pressure on ocean ecosystems

  • This study concludes that surfers receive ocean literacy benefits— understanding and awareness of Ocean Literacy Principles 3, 5, and 6—and that surfing waves within coastal ecosystems is a potential mechanism for ocean literacy

  • There are many variables within the surfing SES, which produce a variation of interactions and outcomes, yet the results show frequency—how often surfers surf—is statistically significant with regards to surfer ocean literacy levels

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Summary

Introduction

Biodiversity loss and marine plastic pollution [1,2,3,4] leading to 59% of the ocean experiencing increasing impact [5], ocean sustainability strategies are beginning to be embedded within international policy [6]. Management of the global ocean and its resources are key targets of the United Nation’s Sustainable Development Goals and specific to Goal. Is addressing this aspect through a multi-scale and transdisciplinary effort to collect and share Ocean Science during the 10 years, with ocean literacy identified as playing a key role in tackling social challenges within the Decade of Ocean Science (2021–2030) [8]. While the concept of ocean literacy began in 2002 as a decentralised and collaborative effort within education in the United States to embed Ocean Science into classroom learning [10], it has been adapted by the Intergovernmental Oceanographic

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