Special feature: measuring components of ecological resilience in long-term ecological datasets.

Abstract:

:Ecological resilience has become a focal concept in ecosystem management. Palaeoecological records (i.e. the sub-fossil remains preserved in sediments) are useful archives to address ecological resilience since they can be used to reconstruct long-term temporal variations in ecosystem properties. The special feature presented here includes nine new papers from members and associates of the PAGES EcoRe3 community. The papers build on previous work in palaeoecology to investigate, identify and compare components of ecosystem resilience on centennial to millennial timescales. There are four key messages that can be summarized from the findings of papers within the special feature: (i) multi-proxy studies reveal insights into the presence and mechanisms of alternative states; (ii) transitions between alternative states may not necessarily be abrupt; (iii) components of ecological resilience can be identified in long-term ecological data and (iv) the palaeoecological record can also provide insights into factors influencing the resilience of ecosystem functioning. Overall, these papers demonstrate the importance of using long-term ecological records for addressing questions related to the theoretical framework provided by ecological resilience.

journal_name

Biol Lett

journal_title

Biology letters

authors

Seddon AWR

doi

10.1098/rsbl.2020.0881

subject

Has Abstract

pub_date

2021-01-01 00:00:00

pages

20200881

issue

1

eissn

1744-9561

issn

1744-957X

journal_volume

17

pub_type

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