从生态系统崩溃的角度理解人类长期生态动力学

Adrian C Newton, Fiona Coward, Sarah Elliott, Emma Jenkins, Marc Vander Linden, Philip Riris, Fabio Silva
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引用次数: 0

摘要

关于长期人类生态动力学的大多数研究都是探讨人类种群规模和结构的变化,通常与气候变化有关。在此,我们借鉴保护科学的最新进展,提出了另一种视角,研究生态系统崩溃的原因和后果。我们根据关键机制和基本理论,确定了可导致生态系统突然转变的人类行为。这种生态系统崩溃反过来又会影响人类社会,改变生态系统对人类的益处流向。因此,可以通过分别分析相互关联的社会和生态子系统的动态来理解人类生态动力学。生态系统崩溃代表了对这些子系统的扰动,并为了解它们各自的动态机制提供了启示。我们通过四个案例研究来说明这种方法,研究全新世期间农业的传播。通过对这些案例的研究,我们发现了四个关键的知识缺口:社会和生态子系统之间的联系,以及这些联系如何随着时间的推移而变化;这些子系统之间是否存在反馈;局部和区域范围的崩溃之间的关系;以及与生态恢复之间的关系。加强对生态系统崩溃的研究有助于澄清环境退化对社会动态的相对影响,同时为复原力和可持续性提供启示。鉴于生态系统崩溃具有突出的社会重要性,此类研究还可以加强历史科学与当代世界的相关性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Understanding long-term human ecodynamics through the lens of ecosystem collapse
Most research on long-term human ecodynamics examines changes in the size and structure of human populations, often in relation to climate change. Here we offer an alternative perspective that draws on recent progress in conservation science, examining the causes and consequences of ecosystem collapse. We identify human actions that can cause abrupt transformation of ecosystems, in relation to key mechanisms and underlying theory. Such ecosystem collapse can in turn affect human societies by altering flows of ecosystem benefits to people. In this way, human ecodynamics can be understood by separately analysing the dynamics of social and ecological sub-systems, which are reciprocally linked. Ecosystem collapse represents a perturbation of these sub-systems, and provides insights into the mechanisms underlying their respective dynamics. We illustrate this approach through four case studies, which examine the spread of agriculture during the Holocene. Four key knowledge gaps emerge through consideration of these case studies: the linkages between social and ecological sub-systems, and how these change over time; the presence of feedbacks between these sub-systems; the relationships between local- and regional-scale collapse; and the relationships with ecological recovery. Increased research on ecosystem collapse could help clarify the relative influence of environmental degradation on societal dynamics, while providing insights into resilience and sustainability. Given the outstanding societal importance of ecosystem collapse, such research could also strengthen the relevance of historical sciences to the contemporary world.
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