Novelty, variability, and resilience: Exploring adaptive cycles in a marine ecosystem under pressure

IF 5.1 2区 环境科学与生态学 Q2 ENGINEERING, ENVIRONMENTAL
Ambio Pub Date : 2025-04-22 DOI:10.1007/s13280-025-02181-1
Yosr Ammar, Riikka Puntila-Dodd, Maciej T. Tomczak, Magnus Nyström, Thorsten Blenckner
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Marine ecosystems are increasingly reshaped by climate change and human activities, resulting in novelty in species assemblages that have shifted beyond historical baselines. One unresolved question is how novelty influences resilience. Here, we examine how novelty arises in ecosystems when they transition through phases and affects resilience using the adaptive cycle framework. We use results from an ecosystem model of the Finnish Archipelago Sea (Baltic Sea) under contrasting climate, nutrient load and fishing scenarios. We quantify novelty in species composition and biomass and use ecological network analysis indices to identify adaptive cycle phases and resilience. Results suggest resilience decreases with higher novelty under warmer climate scenarios. Low nutrient load scenarios facilitate faster adaptive cycles and greater resilience than high nutrient load scenarios under the same climate conditions. Connecting network indices to the adaptive cycle helps to understand how the growing human-induced novelty influences resilience, supporting core resilience theory.

新颖性、可变性和恢复力:探索压力下海洋生态系统的适应周期。
气候变化和人类活动日益重塑海洋生态系统,导致物种组合出现了新的变化,超出了历史基线。一个尚未解决的问题是,新鲜感如何影响适应力。在这里,我们使用适应周期框架来研究生态系统在过渡阶段如何产生新颖性并影响恢复力。我们使用芬兰群岛海(波罗的海)在对比气候、营养负荷和捕鱼情景下的生态系统模型的结果。我们量化了物种组成和生物量的新颖性,并使用生态网络分析指数来确定适应周期阶段和恢复力。结果表明,在气候变暖的情况下,弹性随新颖性的增加而降低。在相同的气候条件下,低养分负荷情景比高养分负荷情景促进更快的适应周期和更大的恢复能力。将网络指数与适应周期联系起来,有助于理解日益增长的人为引发的新颖性如何影响弹性,从而支持核心弹性理论。
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来源期刊
Ambio
Ambio 环境科学-工程:环境
CiteScore
14.30
自引率
3.10%
发文量
123
审稿时长
6 months
期刊介绍: Explores the link between anthropogenic activities and the environment, Ambio encourages multi- or interdisciplinary submissions with explicit management or policy recommendations. Ambio addresses the scientific, social, economic, and cultural factors that influence the condition of the human environment. Ambio particularly encourages multi- or inter-disciplinary submissions with explicit management or policy recommendations. For more than 45 years Ambio has brought international perspective to important developments in environmental research, policy and related activities for an international readership of specialists, generalists, students, decision-makers and interested laymen.
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