4.8 Article

Allowing variance may enlarge the safe operating space for exploited ecosystems

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1511804112

Keywords

adaptive management; critical transition; ecosystem; resilience; variance

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation
  2. US Geological Survey
  3. Beijer Foundation
  4. Family Erling-Persson Foundation
  5. Mistra
  6. Division Of Environmental Biology
  7. Direct For Biological Sciences [1440297] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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Variable flows of food, water, or other ecosystem services complicate planning. Management strategies that decrease variability and increase predictability may therefore be preferred. However, actions to decrease variance over short timescales (2-4 y), when applied continuously, may lead to long-term ecosystem changes with adverse consequences. We investigated the effects of managing short-term variance in three well-understood models of ecosystem services: lake eutrophication, harvest of a wild population, and yield of domestic herbivores on a rangeland. In all cases, actions to decrease variance can increase the risk of crossing critical ecosystem thresholds, resulting in less desirable ecosystem states. Managing to decrease short-term variance creates ecosystem fragility by changing the boundaries of safe operating spaces, suppressing information needed for adaptive management, cancelling signals of declining resilience, and removing pressures that may build tolerance of stress. Thus, the management of variance interacts strongly and inseparably with the management of resilience. By allowing for variation, learning, and flexibility while observing change, managers can detect opportunities and problems as they develop while sustaining the capacity to deal with them.

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