Panarchy and management of lake ecosystems.

IF 3.6 2区 社会学 Q1 ECOLOGY
David G Angeler, Craig R Allen, Ahjond Garmestani, Lance Gunderson, Richard K Johnson
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引用次数: 5

Abstract

A key challenge of the Anthropocene is to confront the dynamic complexity of systems of people and nature to guide robust interventions and adaptations across spatiotemporal scales. Panarchy, a concept rooted in resilience theory, accounts for this complexity, having at its core multiscale organization, interconnectedness of scales, and dynamic system structure at each scale. Despite the increasing use of panarchy in sustainability research, quantitative tests of its premises are scarce, particularly as they pertain to management consequences in ecosystems. In this study we compared the physicochemical environment of managed (limed) and minimally disturbed reference lakes and used time series modeling and correlation analyses to test the premises of panarchy theory: (1) that both lake types show dynamic structure at multiple temporal scales, (2) that this structure differs between lake types due to liming interacting with the natural disturbance regime of lakes, and (3) that liming manifests across temporal scales due to cross-scale connectivity. Hypotheses 1 and 3 were verified whereas support for hypothesis 2 was ambiguous. The literature suggests that liming is a "command-and-control" management form that fails to foster self-organization manifested in lakes returning to pre-liming conditions once management is ceased. In this context, our results suggest that redundance of liming footprints across scales, a feature contributing to resilience, in the physicochemical environment alone may not be enough to create a self-organizing limed lake regime. Further research studying the broader biophysical lake environment, including ecological communities of pelagic and benthic habitats, will contribute to a better understanding of managed lake panarchies. Such insight may further our knowledge of ecosystem management in general and of limed lakes in particular.

Abstract Image

湖泊生态系统的层级与管理。
人类世的一个关键挑战是面对人与自然系统的动态复杂性,以指导跨时空尺度的有力干预和适应。Panarchy,一个植根于弹性理论的概念,解释了这种复杂性,其核心是多尺度的组织,尺度的相互联系,以及每个尺度上的动态系统结构。尽管在可持续性研究中越来越多地使用层级制,但对其前提的定量检验却很少,特别是当它们涉及到生态系统的管理后果时。在这项研究中,我们比较了管理(石灰化)和最小干扰参考湖泊的物理化学环境,并使用时间序列建模和相关分析来验证panarchy理论的前提:(1)两种湖泊类型在多个时间尺度上都表现出动态结构;(2)由于石灰化与湖泊自然干扰机制的相互作用,这种结构在不同湖泊类型之间存在差异;(3)由于跨尺度连通性,石灰化在不同时间尺度上表现出来。假设1和3得到了验证,而假设2的支持是模糊的。文献表明,石灰化是一种“命令和控制”的管理形式,一旦管理停止,就不能促进自组织,表现为湖泊回到石灰化前的状态。在这种背景下,我们的研究结果表明,石灰足迹在不同尺度上的冗余,一个有助于恢复的特征,在物理化学环境中单独可能不足以创造一个自组织的石灰湖制度。进一步研究更广泛的湖泊生物物理环境,包括浮游生物和底栖生物栖息地的生态群落,将有助于更好地理解管理湖泊的生态系统。这种见解可能会进一步加深我们对生态系统管理的认识,特别是对石灰湖的认识。
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来源期刊
Ecology and Society
Ecology and Society 环境科学-生态学
CiteScore
6.20
自引率
4.90%
发文量
109
审稿时长
3 months
期刊介绍: Ecology and Society is an electronic, peer-reviewed, multi-disciplinary journal devoted to the rapid dissemination of current research. Manuscript submission, peer review, and publication are all handled on the Internet. Software developed for the journal automates all clerical steps during peer review, facilitates a double-blind peer review process, and allows authors and editors to follow the progress of peer review on the Internet. As articles are accepted, they are published in an "Issue in Progress." At four month intervals the Issue-in-Progress is declared a New Issue, and subscribers receive the Table of Contents of the issue via email. Our turn-around time (submission to publication) averages around 350 days. We encourage publication of special features. Special features are comprised of a set of manuscripts that address a single theme, and include an introductory and summary manuscript. The individual contributions are published in regular issues, and the special feature manuscripts are linked through a table of contents and announced on the journal''s main page. The journal seeks papers that are novel, integrative and written in a way that is accessible to a wide audience that includes an array of disciplines from the natural sciences, social sciences, and the humanities concerned with the relationship between society and the life-supporting ecosystems on which human wellbeing ultimately depends.
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