Combating ecosystem collapse from the tropics to the Antarctic
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Authors
Bergstrom, Dana M
Wienecke, Barbara C
van den Hoff, John
Hughes, Lesley Ann
Lindenmayer, David B
Ainsworth, Tracy D
Baker, Christopher M
Bland, Lucie
Bowman, David Matthew
Brooks, Shaun T
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Blackwell Publishing Ltd
Abstract
Globally, collapse of ecosystems—potentially irreversible change to ecosystem structure, composition and function—imperils biodiversity, human health and well-being. We examine the current state and recent trajectories of 19 ecosystems, spanning 58° of latitude across 7.7 M km , from Australia's coral reefs to terrestrial Antarctica. Pressures from global climate change and regional human impacts, occurring as chronic ‘presses’ and/or acute ‘pulses’, drive ecosystem collapse. Ecosystem responses to 5–17 pressures were categorised as four collapse profiles—abrupt, smooth, stepped and fluctuating. The manifestation of widespread ecosystem collapse is a stark warning of the necessity to take action. We present a three-step assessment and management framework (3As Pathway Awareness, Anticipation and Action) to aid strategic and effective mitigation to alleviate further degradation to help secure our future.
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Global Change Biology
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Restricted until
2099-12-31