Social-ecological systems in the Anthropocene: The need for integrating social and biophysical records at regional scales

Author:

Dearing JA1,Acma B2,Bub S3,Chambers FM4,Chen X56,Cooper J7,Crook D8,Dong XH6,Dotterweich M9,Edwards ME1,Foster TH10,Gaillard M-J11,Galop D12,Gell P13,Gil A14,Jeffers E15,Jones RT16,Anupama K17,Langdon PG1,Marchant R18,Mazier F1112,McLean CE19,Nunes LH20,Sukumar R21,Suryaprakash I22,Umer M23,Yang XD6,Wang R6,Zhang K24

Affiliation:

1. University of Southampton, UK

2. Anadolu University, Turkey

3. University of Koblenz-Landau, Germany

4. University of Gloucestershire, UK

5. China University of Geosciences (Wuhan), China

6. Nanjing Institute of Geography and Limnology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, China

7. Americas Section, British Museum, UK

8. University of Hertfordshire, UK

9. GEOarch – Applied Geoarchaeology, Germany and University of Vienna, Austria

10. University of Tulsa, USA

11. Linnaeus University, Sweden

12. Toulouse Jean Jaures University, France

13. Federation University Australia, Australia

14. Museo de Historia Natural de San Rafael, Argentina

15. University of Oxford, UK

16. University of Exeter, UK

17. French Institute of Pondicherry, India

18. University of York, UK

19. Youngstown State University, USA

20. State University of Campinas, Brazil

21. Indian Institute of Science, India

22. National Centre for Biological Sciences, Tata Institute of Fundamental Research, India

23. Addis Ababa University, Ethiopia (deceased)

24. James Cook University, Australia

Abstract

Understanding social-ecological system dynamics is a major research priority for sustainable management of landscapes, ecosystems and resources. But the lack of multi-decadal records represents an important gap in information that hinders the development of the research agenda. Without improved information on the long-term and complex interactions between causal factors and responses, it will be difficult to answer key questions about trends, rates of change, tipping points, safe operating spaces and pre-impact conditions. Where available long-term monitored records are too short or lacking, palaeoenvironmental sciences may provide continuous multi-decadal records for an array of ecosystem states, processes and services. Combining these records with conventional sources of historical information from instrumental monitoring records, official statistics and enumerations, remote sensing, archival documents, cartography and archaeology produces an evolutionary framework for reconstructing integrated regional histories. We demonstrate the integrated approach with published case studies from Australia, China, Europe and North America.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Geology,Ecology,Global and Planetary Change

Reference107 articles.

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2. Linking palaeoenvironmental data and models to understand the past and to predict the future

3. Bernes C (2011) Biodiversity in Sweden. Monitor 22. Stockholm: Naturvårdsverket (Swedish Environmental Protection Agency), 280 pp.

4. Regional analysis of social-ecological systems

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