The application of resilience concepts in palaeoecology

Research output: Contribution to journalReview articlepeer-review

Abstract

The concept of resilience has become increasingly important in ecological and socio-ecological literature. With its focus on the temporal behaviour of ecosystems, palaeoecology has an important role to play in developing a scientific understanding of ecological resilience. We provide a critical review of the ways in which resilience is being addressed by palaeoecologists. We review ~180 papers, identifying the definitions or conceptualisations of ‘resilience’ that they use, and analysing the ways in which palaeoecology is contributing to our understanding of ecological resilience. We identify three key areas for further development. Firstly, the term ‘resilience’ is frequently defined too broadly to be meaningful without further qualification. In particular, palaeoecologists need to distinguish between ‘press’ vs. ‘pulse’ disturbances, and ‘ecological’ vs. ‘engineering’ resilience. Palaeoecologists are well placed to critically assess the extent to which these dichotomies apply in real (rather than theoretical) ecosystems, where climate and other environmental parameters are constantly changing. Secondly, defining a formal ‘response model’ - a statement of the anticipated relationships between proxies, disturbances and resilience properties - can help to clarify arguments, especially inferred causal links, since the difficulty of proving causation is a fundamental limitation of palaeoecology for understanding ecosystem drivers and responses. Thirdly, there is a need for critical analysis of the role of scale in ecosystem resilience. Different palaeoenvironmental proxies are differently able to address the various temporal and spatial scales of ecological change, and these limitations, as well as methodological constraints on inherently noisy proxy data, need to be explored and addressed.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1523-1534
Number of pages12
JournalThe Holocene
Volume28
Issue number9
Early online date12 Jun 2018
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Sept 2018

Keywords

  • Disturbance regime
  • Ecosystem dynamics
  • Ecosystem modelling
  • Environmental change
  • Palaeoenvironmental
  • Socio-ecological systems

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'The application of resilience concepts in palaeoecology'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this