4.7 Article

Imagining reef futures after mass coral bleaching events

相关参考文献

注意:仅列出部分参考文献,下载原文获取全部文献信息。
Editorial Material Biology

RAD: A Paradigm, Shifting

John W. Williams

BIOSCIENCE (2022)

Article Biology

Management Foundations for Navigating Ecological Transformation by Resisting, Accepting, or Directing Social-Ecological Change

Dawn R. Magness et al.

Summary: The article presents four foundations to enable a transition to future-oriented conservation and management that increases capacity to manage change, which include identifying plausible social-ecological trajectories, applying upstream and deliberate engagement and decision-making with stakeholders, formulating management pathways to desired futures, and considering a portfolio approach to manage risk and account for multiple preferences across space and time.

BIOSCIENCE (2022)

Article Biology

Navigating Ecological Transformation: Resist-Accept-Direct as a Path to a New Resource Management Paradigm

Gregor W. Schuurman et al.

Summary: Natural resource managers around the world are facing a growing challenge of intensifying global change leading to irreversible ecological transformations. The traditional conservation goals and human well-being are being challenged by this nonstationarity, requiring a new approach for decision-making. The RAD framework provides managers with a simple, flexible decision-making tool to make informed and strategic choices in stewarding transforming ecosystems.

BIOSCIENCE (2022)

Article Environmental Sciences

Navigating climate crises in the Great Barrier Reef

Michele L. Barnes et al.

Summary: This study qualitatively assessed the actions taken by key governance actors in response to recurrent mass coral bleaching events at the Great Barrier Reef, and explored the factors influencing their responses. The study found five major categories of activity and identified various factors within adaptive capacity that catalyze or hinder the actions taken by these actors.

GLOBAL ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE-HUMAN AND POLICY DIMENSIONS (2022)

Article Environmental Sciences

The anticipatory governance of sustainability transformations: Hybrid approaches and dominant perspectives

Karlijn Muiderman et al.

Summary: This paper examines the perspectives on anticipatory governance in the global network of food system foresight practitioners and highlights the shortcomings in the current approach. It finds that despite diverse food futures, anticipation processes primarily focus on strategic planning based on predictions, neglecting the impact of deep uncertainty and deliberative action. This results in missed opportunities for transforming future food systems.

GLOBAL ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE-HUMAN AND POLICY DIMENSIONS (2022)

Review Biodiversity Conservation

Engaging with the future: framings of adaptation to climate change in conservation

Claudia Munera-Roldan et al.

Summary: The concept of "adaptation" in conservation is interpreted differently by various communities of practice, such as conservation researchers and protected area managers. A framework based on theoretical perspectives on social change is proposed to analyze how adaptation is framed and its influence on adaptation options. Grouped themes represent passive, active, or indirect adaptation approaches to guide conservation researchers and practitioners engaged in climate adaptation research.

ECOSYSTEMS AND PEOPLE (2022)

Article Biodiversity Conservation

Convergence of stakeholders' environmental threat perceptions following mass coral bleaching of the Great Barrier Reef

Lauric Thiault et al.

Summary: The study found that stakeholders' perceptions of threats related to the Great Barrier Reef in Australia tended to align after consecutive years of mass coral bleaching events. Climate change emerged as the most frequently reported threat by all stakeholder groups, followed by concerns about fishing and poor water quality. Additionally, there was a convergence in threat prioritization within and across stakeholder groups after the bleaching events, indicating new opportunities for strategic public engagement and management support.

CONSERVATION BIOLOGY (2021)

Article Fisheries

Responding to Ecosystem Transformation: Resist, Accept, or Direct?

Laura M. Thompson et al.

Summary: Ecosystem transformation involves the emergence of a self-organizing, self-sustaining system that deviates from prior structure and function. Fish and wildlife managers can choose to resist change, accept transformation, or direct change to a future ecosystem configuration. This suite of management strategies can be implemented using a structured approach of learning and adapting as ecosystems change.

FISHERIES (2021)

Article Biodiversity Conservation

An agenda for research and action toward diverse and just futures for life on Earth

C. Wyborn et al.

Summary: Decades of research and policy interventions on biodiversity have failed to adequately address biodiversity degradation and social justice issues, necessitating new approaches. A research and action agenda has been devised to revisit biodiversity through critical reflection on past and present research, policy, and practice to inspire creative future thinking. The agenda outlines four thematic areas for future research aimed at fostering just and diverse futures for human and nonhuman life on Earth.

CONSERVATION BIOLOGY (2021)

Article Biology

R-R-T (resistance-resilience-transformation) typology reveals differential conservation approaches across ecosystems and time

Guillaume Peterson St-Laurent et al.

Summary: Conservation practices in the first decade of the millennium mainly focused on resisting changes and maintaining current conditions, but the increasing impacts of climate change have emphasized the need for transformative action. By introducing the R-R-T scale, researchers found a trend towards transformation in adaptation projects funded since 2011, with varying responses across ecosystems. This suggests a potential shift towards more transformative actions, especially in forested ecosystems.

COMMUNICATIONS BIOLOGY (2021)

Article Biodiversity Conservation

Designing a blueprint for coral reef survival

Joan Kleypas et al.

Summary: Climate change poses a growing threat to coral reefs, highlighting the importance of climate mitigation in preventing ecosystem collapse. Innovative actions are needed to enhance reef resilience, alongside strong political and social commitment as well as sufficient funding for effective protection and conservation measures.

BIOLOGICAL CONSERVATION (2021)

Article Biodiversity Conservation

The spatial footprint and patchiness of large-scale disturbances on coral reefs

Andreas Dietzel et al.

Summary: This study found that recent mass coral bleaching events on the Great Barrier Reef have larger and more continuous spatial footprints than previous bleaching events, posing an unprecedented threat to coral species resilience. In contrast to the impacts of a severe tropical cyclone, the bleaching events isolated severely affected reefs from the nearest mildly affected reefs by greater distances, highlighting the significant threat to coral species posed by the spatial footprint of these recent bleaching events.

GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY (2021)

Review Biodiversity Conservation

Biodiversity narratives: stories of the evolving conservation landscape

Elena Louder et al.

ENVIRONMENTAL CONSERVATION (2020)

Article Green & Sustainable Science & Technology

Advancing Coral Reef Governance into the Anthropocene

Tiffany H. Morrison et al.

ONE EARTH (2020)

Article Environmental Sciences

The black box of power in polycentric environmental governance

T. H. Morrison et al.

GLOBAL ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE-HUMAN AND POLICY DIMENSIONS (2019)

Review Biodiversity Conservation

Coral reef conservation in the Anthropocene: Confronting spatial mismatches and prioritizing functions

David R. Bellwood et al.

BIOLOGICAL CONSERVATION (2019)

Article Multidisciplinary Sciences

Global warming transforms coral reef assemblages

Terry P. Hughes et al.

NATURE (2018)

Article Social Sciences, Interdisciplinary

How to conduct a Narrative Policy Framework study

Elizabeth A. Shanahan et al.

SOCIAL SCIENCE JOURNAL (2018)

Review Biodiversity Conservation

Shifting paradigms in restoration of the world's coral reefs

Madeleine J. H. Van Oppen et al.

GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY (2017)

Article Environmental Sciences

Understanding How Policy Actors Improvise and Collaborate in the Great Barrier Reef

Karen Vella et al.

COASTAL MANAGEMENT (2017)

Review Environmental Sciences

Transformative Environmental Governance

Brian C. Chaffin et al.

ANNUAL REVIEW OF ENVIRONMENT AND RESOURCES, VOL 41 (2016)

Review Environmental Sciences

Emergence, institutionalization and renewal: Rhythms of adaptive governance in complex social-ecological systems

Brian C. Chaffin et al.

JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT (2016)

Article Political Science

Policy Narratives and Policy Processes

Elizabeth A. Shanahan et al.

POLICY STUDIES JOURNAL (2011)

Article Political Science

A Narrative Policy Framework: Clear Enough to Be Wrong?

Michael D. Jones et al.

POLICY STUDIES JOURNAL (2010)

Review Environmental Sciences

Are there social limits to adaptation to climate change?

W. Neil Adger et al.

CLIMATIC CHANGE (2009)

Article Environmental Sciences

A conceptual framework for analysing adaptive capacity and multi-level learning processes in resource governance regimes

Claudia Pahl-Wostl

GLOBAL ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE-HUMAN AND POLICY DIMENSIONS (2009)