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Long-term transients help explain regime shifts in consumer-renewable resource systems
- Source :
- Communications Earth & Environment. 2
- Publication Year :
- 2021
- Publisher :
- Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2021.
-
Abstract
- As planetary boundaries loom, there is an urgent need to develop sustainable equilibriums between societies and the resources they consume, thereby avoiding regime shifts to undesired states. Transient system trajectories to a stable state may differ substantially, posing significant challenges to distinguishing sustainable from unsustainable trajectories. We use stylized models to show how feedbacks between anthropogenic harvest regimes and resource availability drive transient dynamics. We show how substantial time lags may occur between interventions and social-ecological outcomes, and that sudden system collapses need not be linked to recent environmental changes. Historical reconstructions of island state populations show a variety of transient dynamics that closely corresponds to model expectations based on island differences in productivity and harvesting regime. We conclude that vulnerable social-ecological systems may persist when the population:resource ratio remains within a viable range of intermediate (rather than small) values, which implies that averting environmental crises may require counter-intuitive measures. Transient states influence the sustainable or unsustainable trajectories of social-ecological systems and lead to time lags between rapid regime shifts and the change or intervention which caused them, according to theoretical models of island states.
- Subjects :
- 0303 health sciences
education.field_of_study
Stylized fact
Resource (biology)
010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences
Natural resource economics
Population
15. Life on land
01 natural sciences
Term (time)
Variety (cybernetics)
03 medical and health sciences
Intervention (law)
13. Climate action
Planetary boundaries
Economics
General Earth and Planetary Sciences
education
Productivity
030304 developmental biology
0105 earth and related environmental sciences
General Environmental Science
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 26624435
- Volume :
- 2
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Communications Earth & Environment
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....a243d4da95ca6b83a3784669ed586a1f