4.7 Article

Temporal invariance of social-ecological catchments

期刊

ECOLOGICAL APPLICATIONS
卷 31, 期 2, 页码 -

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/eap.2272

关键词

complex social-ecological systems; kernel density estimation; landscape patterns; recreational fisheries; spatiotemporal assessments

资金

  1. Federal Aid in Sport Fish Restoration project [F-182-R]
  2. Nebraska Public Power District [4200002717]
  3. Hatch funds through the Agricultural Research Division at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln
  4. Federal Aid in Wildlife Restoration [W-120-T]
  5. U.S. Geological Survey
  6. Nebraska Game and Parks Commission
  7. University of Nebraska
  8. U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
  9. Wildlife Management Institute
  10. IRB [14051]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

The study collected residence ZIP codes from 19,983 angler parties to construct seven angler-waterbody catchments in Nebraska, USA. Contrary to expectations, the size of the catchment remained invariant despite diverse resource selection among mobile anglers. The study highlights the potential impact of social and ecological conditions on landscape patterns in resource use and emphasizes the importance of timely conservation decisions within social-ecological systems.
Natural resources such as waterbodies, public parks, and wildlife refuges attract people from varying distances on the landscape, creating social-ecological catchments. Catchments have provided great utility for understanding physical and social relationships within specific disciplines. Yet, catchments are rarely used across disciplines, such as its application to understand complex spatiotemporal dynamics between mobile human users and patchily distributed natural resources. We collected residence ZIP codes from 19,983 angler parties during 2014-2017 to construct seven angler-waterbody catchments in Nebraska, USA. We predicted that sizes of dense (10% utilization distribution) and dispersed (95% utilization distribution) angler-waterbody catchments would change across seasons and years as a function of diverse resource selection among mobile anglers. Contrary to expectations, we revealed that catchment size was invariant. We discuss how social (conservation actions) and ecological (low water quality, reduction in species diversity) conditions are expected to impact landscape patterns in resource use. We highlight how this simple concept and user-friendly technique can inform timely landscape-level conservation decisions within coupled social-ecological systems that are currently difficult to study and understand.

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