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      U.S. Natural Resources and Climate Change: Concepts and Approaches for Management Adaptation

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          Abstract

          Public lands and waters in the United States traditionally have been managed using frameworks and objectives that were established under an implicit assumption of stable climatic conditions. However, projected climatic changes render this assumption invalid. Here, we summarize general principles for management adaptations that have emerged from a major literature review. These general principles cover many topics including: (1) how to assess climate impacts to ecosystem processes that are key to management goals; (2) using management practices to support ecosystem resilience; (3) converting barriers that may inhibit management responses into opportunities for successful implementation; and (4) promoting flexible decision making that takes into account challenges of scale and thresholds. To date, the literature on management adaptations to climate change has mostly focused on strategies for bolstering the resilience of ecosystems to persist in their current states. Yet in the longer term, it is anticipated that climate change will push certain ecosystems and species beyond their capacity to recover. When managing to support resilience becomes infeasible, adaptation may require more than simply changing management practices—it may require changing management goals and managing transitions to new ecosystem states. After transitions have occurred, management will again support resilience—this time for a new ecosystem state. Thus, successful management of natural resources in the context of climate change will require recognition on the part of managers and decisions makers of the need to cycle between “managing for resilience” and “managing for change.”

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          Most cited references50

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          The struggle to govern the commons.

          Human institutions--ways of organizing activities--affect the resilience of the environment. Locally evolved institutional arrangements governed by stable communities and buffered from outside forces have sustained resources successfully for centuries, although they often fail when rapid change occurs. Ideal conditions for governance are increasingly rare. Critical problems, such as transboundary pollution, tropical deforestation, and climate change, are at larger scales and involve nonlocal influences. Promising strategies for addressing these problems include dialogue among interested parties, officials, and scientists; complex, redundant, and layered institutions; a mix of institutional types; and designs that facilitate experimentation, learning, and change.
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            Novel ecosystems: theoretical and management aspects of the new ecological world order

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              Scenario Planning: a Tool for Conservation in an Uncertain World

                Author and article information

                Contributors
                west.jordan@epa.gov
                Journal
                Environ Manage
                Environmental Management
                Springer-Verlag (New York )
                0364-152X
                1432-1009
                28 July 2009
                December 2009
                : 44
                : 6
                : 1001-1021
                Affiliations
                [1 ]U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, National Center for Environmental Assessment, 1200 Pennsylvania Avenue NW (8601P), Washington, DC 20460 USA
                [2 ]The Nature Conservancy, 4722 Latona Avenue NE, Seattle, WA 98105 USA
                [3 ]The Nature Conservancy in New Mexico, Santa Fe, NM 87501 USA
                [4 ]College of Forest Resources, University of Washington, Box 352100, Seattle, WA 98195-2100 USA
                [5 ]Environmental Studies Department, University of California, Santa Cruz, 1156 High Street, Santa Cruz, CA 95064 USA
                [6 ]Center for Marine Biodiversity and Conservation, Scripps Institution of Oceanography, University of California, San Diego, 9500 Gilman Drive #0208, La Jolla, CA 92093-0208 USA
                [7 ]The Nature Conservancy, 201 Mission Street, 4th Floor, San Francisco, CA 94105 USA
                Article
                9345
                10.1007/s00267-009-9345-1
                2791483
                19636606
                aa534535-1200-4a7d-8250-d9a540999e7a
                © The Author(s) 2009
                History
                : 5 September 2008
                : 8 June 2009
                : 28 June 2009
                Categories
                Article
                Custom metadata
                © Springer Science+Business Media, LLC 2009

                Environmental management, Policy & Planning
                ecosystems,resilience,uncertainty,climate change,resource management,thresholds,adaptation,triage

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