Maintaining human wellbeing as socio-environmental systems undergo regime shifts
Andrew R. Tilman, Elisabeth H. Krueger, Lisa C. McManus, James R., Watson

TL;DR
This paper investigates how ecological flickering near tipping points affects human wellbeing and explores governance strategies to mitigate negative impacts in socio-environmental systems.
Contribution
It links ecological flickering dynamics to human adaptation models, revealing how flickering influences wellbeing and proposing governance interventions to enhance resilience.
Findings
Flickering can cause disproportionate declines in wellbeing.
Adaptive capacity investments can mitigate flickering impacts.
Flickering dynamics are relevant to real-world communities like Mongolia and fisheries.
Abstract
Global environmental change is pushing many socio-environmental systems towards critical thresholds, where ecological systems' states are on the precipice of tipping points and interventions are needed to navigate or avert impending transitions. Flickering, where a system vacillates between alternative stable states, is touted as a useful early warning signal of irreversible transitions to undesirable ecological regimes. However, while flickering may presage an ecological tipping point, these dynamics also pose unique challenges for human adaptation. In this work, we link an ecological model that can exhibit flickering to a model of human adaptation to a changing environment. This allows us to explore the impact of flickering on the utility of adaptive agents in a coupled socio-environmental system. We highlight the conditions under which flickering causes wellbeing to decline…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEcosystem dynamics and resilience
