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Provedor de dados:  Ecology and Society
País:  Canada
Título:  Catastrophic Thresholds: A Synthesis of Concepts, Perspectives, and Applications
Autores:  Briske, David D.; Department of Ecosystem Science and Management, Texas A&M University; dbriske@tamu.edu
Washington-Allen, Robert A.; Department of Ecosystem Science and Management, Texas A&M University; washington-allen@tamu.edu
Johnson, Craig R.; School of Zoology, University of Tasmania; craig.johnson@utas.edu.au
Lockwood, Jeffrey A.; Department of Philosophy, University of Wyoming; lockwood@uwyo.edu
Lockwood, Dale R.; Biology Department, Colorado State University; dale.lockwood@colostate.edu
Stringham, Tamzen K.; Department of Animal Biotechnology, University of Nevada-Reno; tstringham@cabnr.unr.edu
Shugart, Herman H; Department of Environmental Sciences, University of Virginia; hhs@virginia.edu
Data:  2010-09-29
Ano:  2010
Palavras-chave:  Complexity science
Ecological resilience
Non-equilibrium ecology
Self-organized systems
Systems theory
Resumo:  Research reported in this feature identifies a convergence of interpretations regarding the threshold dynamics of complex ecological systems. This convergence has arisen from a diverse set of investigations addressing rangeland ecosystem dynamics, disease transmission, and fluctuations in the populations of insect pests. Effective application of the threshold concept to ecosystem management will require development of more robust linkages between non-equilibrium theory and protocols to identify triggers that initiate threshold conditions, feedback loops that establish system resilience, and developmental trajectories and attributes of potential alternative stable states. Successful implementation of these theory/application linkages has the potential to underpin an operational framework of resilience-based ecosystem management that is founded upon the identification of structural indicators that are correlated with vulnerability or proximity to thresholds, rather than threshold identification per se. Several investigations indicate that thresholds are strongly influenced by scale; multiple cross-scale interactions demonstrate the need for greater knowledge and analyses to address scale-dependent processes, i.e., critical scales and scaling laws. This feature emphasizes the relevance of thresholds and non-equilibrium dynamics in multiple natural resource management applications and in so doing demonstrates the need for a more comprehensive and integrated ecological framework capable of quantitatively assessing dynamics at multiple scales to inform management and policy recommendations for optimal management and risk assessment.
Tipo:  Peer-Reviewed Synthesis
Idioma:  Inglês
Identificador:  vol15/iss3/art37/
Editor:  Resilience Alliance
Formato:  text/html application/pdf
Fonte:  Ecology and Society; Vol. 15, No. 3 (2010)
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