| Literature DB >> 19636606 |
Jordan M West1, Susan H Julius, Peter Kareiva, Carolyn Enquist, Joshua J Lawler, Brian Petersen, Ayana E Johnson, M Rebecca Shaw.
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."Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2009 PMID: 19636606 PMCID: PMC2791483 DOI: 10.1007/s00267-009-9345-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Manage ISSN: 0364-152X Impact factor: 3.266
Examples of potential adaptation actions that focus on reduction of anthropogenic stresses as a means of supporting resilience; many of these options are not yet proven and require testing
| Adaptation approach: reduce anthropogenic stresses |
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| ✓ Reduce the impact of current anthropogenic stressors such as fragmentation (e.g., by creating larger management units and migration corridors) and uncharacteristically severe wildfires and insect outbreaks (e.g., by reducing stand densities and abating fuels) |
| ✓ Identify and take early proactive action against non-native invasive species (e.g., by using early detection and rapid response approaches) |
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| ✓ Remove structures that harden the coastlines, impede natural regeneration of sediments, and prevent natural inland migration of sand and vegetation after disturbances |
| ✓ Reduce or eliminate water pollution by working with watershed coalitions to reduce non-point sources and with local, state and federal agencies to reduce atmospheric deposition |
| ✓ Manage Park Service and visitor use practices to prevent people from inadvertently contributing to climate change |
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| ✓ Reduce human water withdrawals to restore natural hydrologic regimes |
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| ✓ Purchase or lease water rights to enhance flow management options |
| ✓ Manage water storage and withdrawals to smooth the supply of available water throughout the year |
| ✓ Develop more effective stormwater infrastructure to reduce future occurrences of severe erosion |
| ✓ Consider shifting access points or moving existing trails for wildlife or river enthusiasts |
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| ✓ Conduct integrated management of nutrient sources and wetland treatment of nutrients to limit hypoxia and eutrophication |
| ✓ Manage water resources to ensure sustainable use in the face of changing recharge rates and saltwater infiltration |
| ✓ Prohibit bulkheads and other engineered structures on estuarine shores to preserve or delay the loss of important shallow-water habitats by permitting their inland migration as sea levels rise |
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| ✓ Manage human stressors such as overfishing and excessive inputs of nutrients, sediments, and pollutants within marine protected areas |
| ✓ Improve water quality by raising awareness of adverse effects of land-based activities on marine environments, implementing integrated coastal and watershed management, and developing options for advanced wastewater treatment |
Examples of adaptation actions that focus on protection of key ecosystem features as a means of supporting resilience; many of these options are not yet proven and require testing
| Adaptation approach: protect key ecosystem features |
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| ✓ Facilitate natural (evolutionary) adaptation through management practices (e.g., prescribed fire and other silvicultural treatments) that shorten regeneration times and promote interspecific competition |
| ✓ Promote connected landscapes to facilitate species movements and gene flow, sustain key ecosystem processes (e.g., pollination and dispersal), and protect critical habitats for threatened and endangered species |
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| ✓ Remove barriers to upstream migration in rivers and streams |
| ✓ Reduce fragmentation and maintain or restore species migration corridors to facilitate natural flow of genes, species and populations |
| ✓ Use wildland fire, mechanical thinning, or prescribed burns where it is documented to reduce risk of anomalously severe fires |
| ✓ Minimize alteration of natural disturbance regimes, for example through protection of natural flow regimes in rivers or removal of infrastructure that prohibits the allowance of wildland fire |
| ✓ Aggressively prevent establishment of invasive non-native species or diseases where they are documented to threaten native species or current ecosystem function |
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| ✓ Manage risk of catastrophic fires through prescribed burns |
| ✓ Reduce or eliminate stressors on conservation target species |
| ✓ Improve the matrix surrounding the refuge by partnering with adjacent owners to improve/build new habitats |
| ✓ Install levees and other engineering works to alter water flows to benefit refuge species |
| ✓ Remove dispersal barriers and establish dispersal bridges for species |
| ✓ Use conservation easements around the refuge to allow species dispersal and maintain ecosystem function |
| ✓ Facilitate migration through the establishment and maintenance of wildlife corridors |
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| ✓ Maintain the natural flow regime through managing dam flow releases upstream of the wild and scenic river (through option agreements with willing partners) to protect flora and fauna in drier downstream river reaches, or to prevent losses from extreme flooding |
| ✓ Use drought-tolerant plant varieties to help protect riparian buffers |
| ✓ Create wetlands or off-channel storage basins to reduce erosion during high flow periods |
| ✓ Actively remove invasive species that threaten key native species |
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| ✓ Help protect tidal marshes from erosion with oyster breakwaters and rock sills and thus preserve their water filtration and fisheries enhancement functions |
| ✓ Preserve and restore the structural complexity and biodiversity of vegetation in tidal marshes, seagrass meadows, and mangroves |
| ✓ Adapt protections of important biogeochemical zones and critical habitats as the locations of these areas change with climate |
| ✓ Connect landscapes with corridors to enable migrations to sustain wildlife biodiversity across the landscape |
| ✓ Develop practical approaches to apply the principle of rolling easements to prevent engineered barriers from blocking landward retreat of coastal marshes and other shoreline habitats as sea level rises |
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| ✓ Identify ecological connections among ecosystems and use them to inform the design of MPAs and management decisions such as protecting resistant areas to ensure sources of recruitment for recovery of populations in damaged areas |
| ✓ Manage functional species groups necessary to maintaining the health of reefs and other ecosystems |
| ✓ Design marine protected areas with dynamic boundaries and buffers to protect breeding and foraging habits of highly migratory and pelagic species |
| ✓ Monitor ecosystems and have rapid-response strategies prepared to assess ecological effects of extreme events as they occur |
| ✓ Identify and protect ecologically significant (“critical”) areas such as nursery grounds, spawning grounds, and areas of high species diversity |
Examples of adaptation actions that focus on representation as a means of supporting resilience; many of these options are not yet proven and require testing
| Adaptation approach: represent |
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| ✓ Modify genetic diversity guidelines to increase the range of species, maintain high effective population sizes, and favor genotypes known for broad tolerance ranges |
| ✓ Where ecosystems will very likely become more water limited, manage for drought- and heat-tolerant species and populations, and where climate trends are less certain, manage for a variety of species and genotypes with a range of tolerances to low soil moisture and higher temperatures |
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| ✓ Allow the establishment of species that are non-native locally, but which maintain native biodiversity or enhance ecosystem function in the overall region |
| ✓ Actively plant or introduce desired species after disturbances or in anticipation of the loss of some species |
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| ✓ Strategically expand the boundaries of refuges to increase ecological, genetic, geographical, behavioral and morphological variation in species |
| ✓ Facilitate the growth of plant species more adapted to future climate conditions |
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| ✓ Increase genetic diversity through plantings or by stocking fish |
| ✓ Increase physical habitat heterogeneity in channels to support diverse biotic assemblages |
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| ✓ Maintain high genetic diversity through strategies such as the establishment of reserves specifically for this purpose |
| ✓ Maintain landscape complexity of salt marsh landscapes, especially preserving marsh edge environments |
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| ✓ Maximize habitat heterogeneity within marine protected areas and consider protecting larger areas to preserve biodiversity, biological connections among habitats, and ecological functions |
| ✓ Include entire ecological units (e.g., coral reefs with their associated mangroves and seagrasses) in marine protected area design to maintain ecosystem function and resilience |
| ✓ Ensure that the full breadth of habitat types is protected (e.g., fringing reef, fore reef, back reef, patch reef) |
Examples of adaptation actions that focus on replication as a means of supporting resilience; many of these options are not yet proven and require testing
| Adaptation approach: replicate |
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| ✓ Spread risks by increasing ecosystem redundancy and buffers in both natural environments and plantations |
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| ✓ Practice bet-hedging by replicating populations and gene pools of desired species |
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| ✓ Provide redundant refuge types to reduce risk to trust species |
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| ✓ Establish special protection for multiple headwater reaches that support keystone processes or sensitive species |
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| ✓ When restoring oyster reefs, replicate reefs along a depth gradient to allow fish and crustaceans to survive when depth-dependant environmental degradation occurs |
| ✓ Support migrating shorebirds by ensuring protection of replicated estuaries along the flyway |
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| ✓ Replicate habitat types in multiple areas to spread risks associated with climate change |
Examples of adaptation actions that focus on restoration as a means of supporting resilience; many of these options are not yet proven and require testing
| Adaptation approach: restore |
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| ✓ Use the paleological record and historical ecological studies to revise and update restoration goals so that selected species will be tolerant of anticipated climate |
| ✓ Where appropriate after large-scale disturbances, reset succession and manage for asynchrony at the landscape scale by promoting diverse age classes and species mixes, a variety of successional stages, and spatially complex and heterogeneous vegetation structure |
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| ✓ Restore vegetation where it confers biophysical protection to increase resilience, including riparian areas that shade streams and coastal wetland vegetation that buffers shorelines |
| ✓ Minimize soil loss after fire or vegetation dieback using native vegetation and debris |
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| ✓ Restore and increase habitat availability and reduce stressors in order to capture the full geographical, geophysical, and ecological ranges of species on as many refuges as possible |
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| ✓ Conduct river restoration projects to stabilize eroding banks, repair in-stream habitat, or promote fish passages from areas with high temperatures and less precipitation |
| ✓ Restore the natural capacity of rivers to buffer climate-change impacts (e.g., through land acquisition around rivers, levee setbacks to free the floodplain of infrastructure, riparian buffer repairs) |
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| ✓ Restore important native species and remove invasive non-natives to improve marsh characteristics that promote propagation and production of fish and wildlife |
| ✓ Direct estuarine habitat restoration projects to places where the restored ecosystem has room to retreat as sea level rises |
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| ✓ Following extreme events, consider whether actions should be taken to enhance natural recovery processes through active restoration |
| ✓ Consider mangrove restoration for potential benefits including shoreline protection, expansion of nursery habitat, and release of tannins and other dissolved organic compounds that may reduce photo-oxidative stress in corals |
Examples of adaptation actions that focus on the use of refugia as a means of supporting resilience; many of these options are not yet proven and require testing
| Adaptation approach: identify refugia |
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| ✓ Use the paleological record and historical ecological studies to identify environments buffered against climate change, which would be good candidates for long-term conservation |
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| ✓ Create or protect refugia for valued aquatic species at risk to the effects of early snowmelt on river flow |
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| ✓ Reforest riparian boundaries with native species to create shaded thermal refugia for fish species in rivers and streams |
| ✓ Identify climate change refugia and acquire necessary land |
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| ✓ Plant riparian vegetation to provide fish and other organisms with refugia |
| ✓ Acquire additional river reaches for the wild and scenic river where they contain naturally occurring refugia from climate change stressors |
| ✓ Create side-channels and adjacent wetlands to provide refugia for species during droughts and floods |
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| ✓ Restore oyster reefs along a depth gradient to provide shallow water refugia for mobile species such as fish and crustaceans to retreat to in response to climate-induced deep water hypoxia/anoxia |
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| ✓ Identify and protect areas observed to be resistant to climate change effects or to recover quickly from climate-induced disturbances |
| ✓ Establish dynamic marine protected areas defined by large-scale oceanographic features such as oceanic fronts where changes in types and abundances of organisms often occur |
Examples of adaptation actions that focus on relocation as a means of supporting resilience; many of these options are not yet proven and require testing
| Adaptation approach: relocate |
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| ✓ Establish or strengthen long-term seed banks to create the option of re-establishing extirpated populations in new/more appropriate locations |
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| ✓ Assist in species migrations |
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| ✓ Facilitate long-distance transport of threatened endemic species |
| ✓ Facilitate interim propagation and sheltering or feeding of mistimed migrants, holding them until suitable habitat becomes available |
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| ✓ Establish programs to move isolated populations of species of interest that become stranded when water levels drop |
Examples of legislation and regulation as barriers to and opportunities for adaptation
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| Perceived barrier | Opportunity | Examples |
| Legislation and agency policies may be highly static, inhibit dynamic planning, impede flexible adaptive responses and force a fine-filter approach to management | Re-evaluate capabilities of, or authorities under, existing legislation to determine how climate change can be addressed within the legislative boundaries | • Use state wildlife action plans to manage lands adjacent to national wildlife refuges to enable climate-induced species emigration (Scott and others |
| • Incorporate climate change impacts into priority setting for designation of new wild and scenic rivers (Palmer and others | ||
Examples of management policies and procedures as barriers to and opportunities for adaptation
| Management policies and procedures | ||
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| Perceived barrier | Opportunity | Examples |
| Seasonal management activities may be affected by changes in timing and duration of seasons | Review timing of management activities and take advantage of seasonal changes that provide more opportunities for adaptation | • Take advantage of shorter winter seasons (longer prescribed fire season) to do fuel treatments on more national forest acres (Julius and others |
| Agency policies do not recognize climatic change as a significant problem or stressor | Take advantage of flexibility in planning guidelines and processes to incorporate adaptation to climate change | • Where guidelines are flexible for meeting strategic planning goals (e.g., maintain biodiversity), re-prioritize management actions to address effect of climate change on achievement of goals (Julius and others |
| Political boundaries do not necessarily align with ecological processes; some resources cross boundaries; checkerboard ownership pattern with lands alternating between public and private ownership at odds with landscape-scale management (see Joyce and others | Identify management authorities with similar goals and adjacent lands; share information, create coalitions and partnerships that extend beyond political boundaries to coordinate management; acquire property for system expansion | • Implement active management at broader landscape scales through existing multi-agency management processes such as (1) the Herger-Feinstein Quincy Library Group Pilot and the FPA Adaptive Management project on Tahoe National Forest (Julius and others |
| • Coordinate dam management at the landscape level for species that cross political boundaries using dam operations prospectively as thermal controls under future climate changes (Palmer and others | ||
Examples of human and financial capital as barriers to and opportunities for adaptation
| Human and financial capital | ||
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| Perceived barrier | Opportunity | Examples |
| Lack of incentive to take risks, develop creative projects; reward system focuses on achieving narrowly prescribed targets; funds allocated encourage routine, easily accomplished activities | Shift from a culture of punishing failure to one that values creative thinking and supports incremental learning and gradual achievement of management goals | • Build into performance expectations of a gradient between success and failure (Baron and others |
| • Set up a systematic method for (1) learning from mistakes and successes, and (2) eliciting the experience and empirical data of front line managers, resource management personnel, and scientific staff (Baron and others | ||
| Little to no climate expertise within management units at regional and local levels; disconnect between science and management that impedes access to information | Use newly created positions or staff openings as opportunities to add climate change expertise; train resource managers and other personnel in climate change science | • Develop expertise through incorporation into existing Forest Service training programs like the silvicultural certification program, regional integrated resource training workshops, and regional training sessions for resource staffs (Joyce and others |
| • Develop managers’ guides, climate primers, management toolkits, a Web clearinghouse, and video presentations (Joyce and others | ||
| National and regional budget policies constrain the altering or supplementing of current management practices to enable adaptation to climate change; general decline in staff resources and capacity | Look for creative ways to augment the workforce and stretch budgets to institute adaptation practices (e.g., individuals or parties with mutual interests in learning about or addressing climate change that may be engaged at no additional cost) | • Augment budget and workforce through volunteers from the public or other sources such as institutions with compatible educational requirements, neighborhood groups, environmental associations, etc., such as the Reef Check Program that help collect coral reef monitoring data (Keller and others |
| • Identify organizations or citizens that benefit from adaptation to share implementation costs in order to avoid more costly impacts/damages (Julius and others | ||
Examples of information and science as barriers to and opportunities for adaptation
| Information and science | ||
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| Perceived barrier | Opportunity | Examples |
| Often no inventory or baseline information exists, and nothing is in place to detect climate change impacts | Identify existing monitoring programs for management; develop a suite of climate change indicators and incorporate them into existing programs | • Use programs such as the National Park Service vital signs for the Inventory and Monitoring Program, Global Fiducial Program, Long Term Ecological Research networks, and National Ecological Observatory Network to monitor climate change impacts and effectiveness of adaptation options (Baron and others |
| Historic conditions may no longer sufficiently inform future planning (e.g., “100-year” flood events may occur more often) | Evaluate policies that use historic conditions and determine how to better reflect accurate baselines in the face of climate change; modify design assumptions to account for changing climate conditions | • Change emphasis from maintenance of “minimum flows” to the more sophisticated and scientifically based “natural flow paradigm,” as is happening in some places (Palmer and others |
| Lack of decision support tools, uncertainty in climate change science, and gaps in scientific data limits assessments of risks and efficacies | Identify and use all available tools/mechanisms currently in place to deal with existing problems to apply to climate-change related impacts | • Hedge bets and optimize practices in situations where system dynamics and responses are fairly certain (Baron and others |
| • Use adaptive management in situations with greater uncertainty (Baron and others | ||
| Occurrence of extreme climate events outside historical experience | Use disturbed landscapes as templates for “management experiments” that provide data to improve adaptive management | • After fire, reforest with genotypes that are better adjusted to the new or unfolding regional climate with nursery stock tolerant to low soil moisture and high temperature, or with a variety of genotypes (Joyce and others |
| Stakeholders have insufficient information to properly evaluate adaptation actions, and thus may oppose/prevent implementation of adaptation (e.g., salvaging harvests after disturbance). Appeals and litigation from external public results in no action | Inform public and promote consensus-building on tough decisions; invite input from a broad range of sources to generate buy-in across stakeholder interests | • Conduct public outreach activities with information on climate impacts and adaptation options—including demonstration projects with concrete results—through workshops, scoping meetings, face-to-face dialog, and informal disposition processes to increase buy in for management actions (Julius and others |
| • Use state and local stakeholders to develop management plans to gain support and participation in implementation and oversight of planning activities, as do the National Estuaries (Peterson and others | ||
Adaptation options for managing in the context of major climatic and ecological changes (modified from Kareiva and others 2008)
| Adaptation options for managing for change |
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| ✓ Assist transitions, population adjustments, and range shifts through manipulation of species mixes, altered genotype selections, modified age structures, and relocations |
| ✓ Rather than focusing only on historic distributions, spread species over a range of environments according to modeled future conditions |
| ✓ Proactively manage early successional stages that follow widespread climate-related mortality by promoting diverse age classes, species mixes, genetic diversity, etc., at landscape scales |
| ✓ Identify areas that supported species in the past under similar conditions to those projected for the future and consider these sites for establishment of “neo-native” plantations or restoration sites |
| ✓ Favor the natural regeneration of species better adapted to projected future conditions |
| ✓ Realign management targets to recognize significantly disrupted conditions, rather than continuing to manage for restoration to a “reference” condition that is no longer realistic given climate change |
| ✓ Manage the public’s expectations as to what ecological states will be possible (or impossible) given the discrepancy between historical climate conditions and current/future climate conditions |
| ✓ Develop guidelines for the scenarios under which restoration projects or rebuilding of human structures should occur after climate disturbances |