REVIEW: Management applications of discontinuity theory

Human impacts on the environment are multifaceted and can occur across distinct spatiotemporal scales. Ecological responses to environmental change are therefore difficult to predict, and entail large degrees of uncertainty. Such uncertainty requires robust tools for management to sustain ecosystem...

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Published inThe Journal of applied ecology Vol. 53; no. 3; pp. 688 - 698
Main Authors Angeler, David G, Allen, Craig R, Barichievy, Chris, Eason, Tarsha, Garmestani, Ahjond S, Graham, Nicholas A J, Granholm, Dean, Gunderson, Lance H, Knutson, Melinda, Nash, Kirsty L, Nelson, R John, Nystrom, Magnus, Spanbauer, Trisha L, Stow, Craig A, Sundstrom, Shana M
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Oxford John Wiley & Sons, Ltd 01.06.2016
Blackwell Publishing Ltd
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Summary:Human impacts on the environment are multifaceted and can occur across distinct spatiotemporal scales. Ecological responses to environmental change are therefore difficult to predict, and entail large degrees of uncertainty. Such uncertainty requires robust tools for management to sustain ecosystem goods and services and maintain resilient ecosystems. We propose an approach based on discontinuity theory that accounts for patterns and processes at distinct spatial and temporal scales, an inherent property of ecological systems. Discontinuity theory has not been applied in natural resource management and could therefore improve ecosystem management because it explicitly accounts for ecological complexity. Synthesis and applications. We highlight the application of discontinuity approaches for meeting management goals. Specifically, discontinuity approaches have significant potential to measure and thus understand the resilience of ecosystems, to objectively identify critical scales of space and time in ecological systems at which human impact might be most severe, to provide warning indicators of regime change, to help predict and understand biological invasions and extinctions and to focus monitoring efforts. Discontinuity theory can complement current approaches, providing a broader paradigm for ecological management and conservation.
Bibliography:http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/1365-2664.12494
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ISSN:0021-8901
1365-2664
DOI:10.1111/1365-2664.12494