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Download filePredicting future ecological degradation based on modelled thresholds
journal contribution
posted on 2010-01-01, 00:00 authored by Peter Fairweather, Rebecca LesterRebecca LesterThreshold models are becoming important in determining the ecological consequences of our actions within the environment and have a key role in setting bounds on targets used by natural resource managers. We have been using thresholds and related concepts adapted from the multiple stable-states literature to model ecosystem response in the Coorong, the estuary for Australia’s largest river. Our modelling approach is based upon developing a state-and-transition model, with the states defined by the biota and the transitions defined by a classification and regression tree (CART) analysis of the environmental data for the region. Here we explore the behaviour of thresholds within that model. Managers tend to plan for a set of often arbitrarily-derived thresholds in their natural resource management. We attempt to assess how the precision afforded by analyses such as CART translates into ecological outcomes, and explicitly trial several approaches to understanding thresholds and transitions in our model and how they might be relevant for management. We conclude that the most promising approach would be a mixture of further modelling (using past behaviour to predict future degradation) in conjunction with targeted experiments to confirm the results. Our case study of the Coorong is further developed, particularly for the modelling stages of the protocol, to provide recommendations to improve natural resource management strategies that are currently in use.
History
Journal
Marine ecology progress seriesVolume
413Pagination
291 - 304Publisher
Inter-ResearchLocation
Oldendorf, GermanyPublisher DOI
Link to full text
ISSN
0171-8630eISSN
1616-1599Language
engPublication classification
C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journalCopyright notice
Inter-Research 2010Usage metrics
Categories
Keywords
Coorongwater allocationstatistical modellingSouth Australiaphysico-chemical transitionsenvironmental futuresempirical anticipationecosystem statesScience & TechnologyLife Sciences & BiomedicinePhysical SciencesEcologyMarine & Freshwater BiologyOceanographyEnvironmental Sciences & EcologyEARLY WARNING SIGNALREGIME SHIFTSRESILIENCEECOSYSTEMSZoologyOceanographyEcology