Creating a safe operating space for the world’s iconic ecosystems


Although some ecosystem responses to climate change are gradual, many ecosystems react in highly nonlinear ways. They show little response until a threshold or tipping point is reached where even a small perturbation may trigger collapse into a state from which recovery is difficult (1). Increasing evidence shows that the critical climate level for such collapse may be altered by conditions that can be managed locally. These synergies between local stressors and climate change provide potential opportunities for proactive management. Although their clarity and scale make such local approaches more conducive to action than global greenhouse gas management, crises in iconic UNESCO World Heritage sites illustrate that such stewardship is at risk of failing.

Citation: Scheffer, M., S. Barrett, S. Carpenter, C. Folke, A.J. Greene, M. Holmgren, T.P. Hughes, S. Kosten, I. van de Leemput, D. Nepstad, E.H. van Nes, E.T.H.M. Peeters, and B.H. Walker. 2015. Creating a safe operating space for the world’s iconic ecosystems. Science 347(6228):1317-1319.

Creating a safe operating space for the world’s iconic ecosystems

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