Marine regime shifts: drivers and impacts on ecosystems services

被引:145
作者
Rocha, J. [1 ]
Yletyinen, J. [1 ,2 ]
Biggs, R. [1 ,3 ]
Blenckner, T. [1 ,2 ]
Peterson, G. [1 ]
机构
[1] Stockholm Univ, Stockholm Resilience Ctr, S-11419 Stockholm, Sweden
[2] Stockholm Univ, Nord Ctr Res Marine Ecosyst & Resources Climate C, Stockholm Resilience Ctr, S-11419 Stockholm, Sweden
[3] Univ Stellenbosch, Ctr Studies Complex, ZA-7600 Stellenbosch, South Africa
关键词
regime shifts; critical transitions; drivers; ecosystem services; networks; CLIMATE-CHANGE; RESILIENCE; COLLAPSE; SCIENCE;
D O I
10.1098/rstb.2013.0273
中图分类号
Q [生物科学];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
Marine ecosystems can experience regime shifts, in which they shift from being organized around one set of mutually reinforcing structures and processes to another. Anthropogenic global change has broadly increased a wide variety of processes that can drive regime shifts. To assess the vulnerability of marine ecosystems to such shifts and their potential consequences, we reviewed the scientific literature for 13 types of marine regime shifts and used networks to conduct an analysis of co-occurrence of drivers and ecosystem service impacts. We found that regime shifts are caused by multiple drivers and have multiple consequences that co-occur in a non-random pattern. Drivers related to food production, climate change and coastal development are the most common co-occurring causes of regime shifts, while cultural services, biodiversity and primary production are the most common cluster of ecosystem services affected. These clusters prioritize sets of drivers for management and highlight the need for coordinated actions across multiple drivers and scales to reduce the risk of marine regime shifts. Managerial strategies are likely to fail if they only address well-understood or data-rich variables, and international cooperation and polycentric institutions will be critical to implement and coordinate action across the scales at which different drivers operate. By better understanding these underlying patterns, we hope to inform the development of managerial strategies to reduce the risk of high-impact marine regime shifts, especially for areas of the world where data are not available or monitoring programmes are not in place.
引用
收藏
页码:1 / 12
页数:12
相关论文
共 61 条
[11]   Science for managing ecosystem services: Beyond the Millennium Ecosystem Assessment [J].
Carpenter, Stephen R. ;
Mooney, Harold A. ;
Agard, John ;
Capistrano, Doris ;
DeFries, Ruth S. ;
Diaz, Sandra ;
Dietz, Thomas ;
Duraiappah, Anantha K. ;
Oteng-Yeboah, Alfred ;
Pereira, Henrique Miguel ;
Perrings, Charles ;
Reid, Walter V. ;
Sarukhan, Jose ;
Scholes, Robert J. ;
Whyte, Anne .
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, 2009, 106 (05) :1305-1312
[12]   Poleward expansion of mangroves is a threshold response to decreased frequency of extreme cold events [J].
Cavanaugh, Kyle C. ;
Kellner, James R. ;
Forde, Alexander J. ;
Gruner, Daniel S. ;
Parker, John D. ;
Rodriguez, Wilfrid ;
Feller, Ilka C. .
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, 2014, 111 (02) :723-727
[13]   Trophic cascades triggered by overfishing reveal possible mechanisms of ecosystem regime shifts [J].
Daskalov, Georgi M. ;
Grishin, Alexander N. ;
Rodionov, Sergei ;
Mihneva, Vesselina .
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, 2007, 104 (25) :10518-10523
[14]   Spreading dead zones and consequences for marine ecosystems [J].
Diaz, Robert J. ;
Rosenberg, Rutger .
SCIENCE, 2008, 321 (5891) :926-929
[15]   Anthropogenic transformation of the biomes, 1700 to 2000 [J].
Ellis, Erle C. ;
Goldewijk, Kees Klein ;
Siebert, Stefan ;
Lightman, Deborah ;
Ramankutty, Navin .
GLOBAL ECOLOGY AND BIOGEOGRAPHY, 2010, 19 (05) :589-606
[16]   Trophic Downgrading of Planet Earth [J].
Estes, James A. ;
Terborgh, John ;
Brashares, Justin S. ;
Power, Mary E. ;
Berger, Joel ;
Bond, William J. ;
Carpenter, Stephen R. ;
Essington, Timothy E. ;
Holt, Robert D. ;
Jackson, Jeremy B. C. ;
Marquis, Robert J. ;
Oksanen, Lauri ;
Oksanen, Tarja ;
Paine, Robert T. ;
Pikitch, Ellen K. ;
Ripple, William J. ;
Sandin, Stuart A. ;
Scheffer, Marten ;
Schoener, Thomas W. ;
Shurin, Jonathan B. ;
Sinclair, Anthony R. E. ;
Soule, Michael E. ;
Virtanen, Risto ;
Wardle, David A. .
SCIENCE, 2011, 333 (6040) :301-306
[17]   The dual-projection approach for two-mode networks [J].
Everett, M. G. ;
Borgatti, S. P. .
SOCIAL NETWORKS, 2013, 35 (02) :204-210
[18]   Solutions for a cultivated planet [J].
Foley, Jonathan A. ;
Ramankutty, Navin ;
Brauman, Kate A. ;
Cassidy, Emily S. ;
Gerber, James S. ;
Johnston, Matt ;
Mueller, Nathaniel D. ;
O'Connell, Christine ;
Ray, Deepak K. ;
West, Paul C. ;
Balzer, Christian ;
Bennett, Elena M. ;
Carpenter, Stephen R. ;
Hill, Jason ;
Monfreda, Chad ;
Polasky, Stephen ;
Rockstrom, Johan ;
Sheehan, John ;
Siebert, Stefan ;
Tilman, David ;
Zaks, David P. M. .
NATURE, 2011, 478 (7369) :337-342
[19]   Regime shifts, resilience, and biodiversity in ecosystem management [J].
Folke, C ;
Carpenter, S ;
Walker, B ;
Scheffer, M ;
Elmqvist, T ;
Gunderson, L ;
Holling, CS .
ANNUAL REVIEW OF ECOLOGY EVOLUTION AND SYSTEMATICS, 2004, 35 :557-581
[20]   The human disease network [J].
Goh, Kwang-Il ;
Cusick, Michael E. ;
Valle, David ;
Childs, Barton ;
Vidal, Marc ;
Barabasi, Albert-Laszlo .
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, 2007, 104 (21) :8685-8690