Regime Shifts, Resilience, and Biodiversity in Ecosystem Management
Stockholm University · Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences · +4 more institutions
Abstract
▪ Abstract We review the evidence of regime shifts in terrestrial and aquatic environments in relation to resilience of complex adaptive ecosystems and the functional roles of biological diversity in this context. The evidence reveals that the likelihood of regime shifts may increase when humans reduce resilience by such actions as removing response diversity, removing whole functional groups of species, or removing whole trophic levels; impacting on ecosystems via emissions of waste and pollutants and climate change; and altering the magnitude, frequency, and duration of disturbance regimes. The combined and often synergistic effects of those pressures can make ecosystems more vulnerable to changes that…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 43.34
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 130
Authors
7Topics & keywords
- Ecosystem
- Resilience (materials science)
- Biodiversity
- Regime shift
- Environmental science
- Context (archaeology)
- Environmental resource management
- Psychological resilience
- Life in Land