Unifying research on social–ecological resilience and collapse

Summary

Ecosystems influence human societies, leading people to manage ecosystems for human benefit. Poor environmental management can lead to reduced ecological resilience and social–ecological collapse. We review research on resilience and collapse across different systems and propose a unifying social–ecological framework based on (i) a clear definition of system identity; (ii) the use of quantitative thresholds to define collapse; (iii) relating collapse processes to system structure; and (iv) explicit comparison of alternative hypotheses and models of collapse. Analysis of 17 representative cases identified 14 mechanisms, in five classes, that explain social–ecological collapse. System structure influences the kind of collapse a system may experience. Mechanistic theories of collapse that unite structure and process can make fundamental contributions to solving global environmental problems.

Information

Link to centre authors: Peterson, Garry
Publication info: Cumming, G.S, Peterson, G. 2017. Unifying research on social-ecological resilience and collapse. Trends in Ecology & Evolution, Published online: July 19, 2017. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.tree.2017.06.014

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