RAD Adaptive Management for Transforming Ecosystems

Author:

Lynch Abigail J1ORCID,Thompson Laura M2,Morton John M3,Beever Erik A4,Clifford Michael5,Limpinsel Douglas6,Magill Robert T7,Magness Dawn R8ORCID,Melvin Tracy A9,Newman Robert A10,Porath Mark T11,Rahel Frank J12,Reynolds Joel H13,Schuurman Gregor W14ORCID,Sethi Suresh A15,Wilkening Jennifer L16

Affiliation:

1. US Geological Survey (USGS), National Climate Adaptation Science Center, Reston, Virginia, United States

2. USGS National Climate Adaptation Science Center and an adjunct faculty member, University of Tennessee, Knoxville, Tennessee, United States

3. US Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS) and is now vice president of the Alaska Wildlife Alliance, Anchorage, Alaska, United States

4. USGS Northern Rocky Mountain Science Center and a research professor for the Department of Ecology, Montana State University, Bozeman, Montana, United States

5. The Nature Conservancy, Las Vegas, Nevada, United States

6. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, Anchorage, Alaska, United States

7. Wildlife biologist, Boise, Idaho, United States

8. USFWS Kenai National Wildlife Refuge, Soldotna, Alaska, United States

9. Michigan State University, East Lansing, Michigan, United States

10. University of North Dakota, Grand Forks, North Dakota, United States

11. USFWS Ecological Services Nebraska Field Office, Wood River, Nebraska, United States

12. University of Wyoming, Laramie, Wyoming, United States

13. US National Park Service (NPS) Climate Change Response Program, Fort Collins, Colorado, United States

14. NPS Climate Change Response Program, Fort Collins, Colorado, United States

15. USGS New York Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit at Cornell University, Ithaca, New York, United States

16. USFWS Natural Resource Program Center, Fort Collins, Colorado, United States

Abstract

Abstract Intensifying global change is propelling many ecosystems toward irreversible transformations. Natural resource managers face the complex task of conserving these important resources under unprecedented conditions and expanding uncertainty. As once familiar ecological conditions disappear, traditional management approaches that assume the future will reflect the past are becoming increasingly untenable. In the present article, we place adaptive management within the resist–accept–direct (RAD) framework to assist informed risk taking for transforming ecosystems. This approach empowers managers to use familiar techniques associated with adaptive management in the unfamiliar territory of ecosystem transformation. By providing a common lexicon, it gives decision makers agency to revisit objectives, consider new system trajectories, and discuss RAD strategies in relation to current system state and direction of change. Operationalizing RAD adaptive management requires periodic review and update of management actions and objectives; monitoring, experimentation, and pilot studies; and bet hedging to better identify and tolerate associated risks.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences

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