journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38696060/active-afforestation-of-drained-peatlands-is-not-a-viable-option-under-the-eu-nature-restoration-law
#1
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Gerald Jurasinski, Alexandra Barthelmes, Kenneth A Byrne, Bogdan H Chojnicki, Jesper Riis Christiansen, Kris Decleer, Christian Fritz, Anke Beate Günther, Vytas Huth, Hans Joosten, Radosław Juszczak, Sari Juutinen, Åsa Kasimir, Leif Klemedtsson, Franziska Koebsch, Wiktor Kotowski, Ain Kull, Mariusz Lamentowicz, Amelie Lindgren, Richard Lindsay, Rita Linkevičienė, Annalea Lohila, Ülo Mander, Michael Manton, Kari Minkkinen, Jan Peters, Florence Renou-Wilson, Jūratė Sendžikaitė, Rasa Šimanauskienė, Julius Taminskas, Franziska Tanneberger, Cosima Tegetmeyer, Rudy van Diggelen, Harri Vasander, David Wilson, Nerijus Zableckis, Dominik H Zak, John Couwenberg
The EU Nature Restoration Law (NRL) is critical for the restoration of degraded ecosystems and active afforestation of degraded peatlands has been suggested as a restoration measure under the NRL. Here, we discuss the current state of scientific evidence on the climate mitigation effects of peatlands under forestry. Afforestation of drained peatlands without restoring their hydrology does not fully restore ecosystem functions. Evidence on long-term climate benefits is lacking and it is unclear whether CO2 sequestration of forest on drained peatland can offset the carbon loss from the peat over the long-term...
May 2, 2024: Ambio
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38684629/navigating-social-ecological-changes-a-mixed-method-analysis-of-extensive-livestock-systems-in-southern-patagonian-forests-argentina
#2
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Paula Rodríguez, Felipe Benra, Joern Fischer, Silvina Romano, Rosina Soler
Sustainable livestock management plays a crucial role in food production, climate change mitigation, and cultural preservation. Our study aimed to identify and analyse the diversity of social-ecological conditions that characterize extensive livestock systems in southern Patagonia. We integrated data collected from interviews and secondary sources and analysed data using hierarchical cluster analysis and non-metric multidimensional scaling to identify distinct ranching types. A qualitative analysis of key informant interviews identified key social-ecological changes for each type...
April 29, 2024: Ambio
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38684628/sustainable-coffee-a-review-of-the-diverse-initiatives-and-governance-dimensions-of-global-coffee-supply-chains
#3
REVIEW
Dale R Wright, Sarah A Bekessy, Pia E Lentini, Georgia E Garrard, Ascelin Gordon, Amanda D Rodewald, Ruth E Bennett, Matthew J Selinske
With a global footprint of 10 million hectares across 12.5 million farms, coffee is among the world's most traded commodities. The coffee industry has launched a variety of initiatives designed to reduce coffee's contribution to climate change and biodiversity loss and enhance the socio-economic conditions of coffee producers. We systematically reviewed the literature on the sustainability and governance of coffee production and developed a typology of eleven sustainability initiatives. Our review shows that coffee sustainability research has focused primarily on the economic outcomes of certification schemes...
April 29, 2024: Ambio
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38671181/when-enough-is-enough-introducing-sufficiency-corridors-to-put-techno-economism-in-its-place
#4
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Richard Bärnthaler
Today's ecological crises are entwined with inequality dynamics, yet prevailing techno-economic approaches in climate research and policy fall short in addressing the ecological crisis as distributional crisis. Recognising the limitations of techno-economism, focused on markets (price adjustments) and technology (efficiency gains), this contribution introduces sufficiency corridors as a concept, research field, and policy approach. Sufficiency corridors represent the space between a floor of meeting needs and a ceiling of ungeneralisable excess, i...
April 26, 2024: Ambio
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38671180/a-dam-or-a-polder-stakeholders-dispute-over-the-right-flood-protection-measure-in-the-czech-republic
#5
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Ivan Andráško, Barbora Duží, Stanislav Martinát
This study focuses on the Skalička Waterwork (SWW), a largely debated and media-covered water-related/flood-protection project in the Czech Republic. Relying primarily on stakeholder interviews, we traced back and reconstructed the project's development, including its key tipping points reflecting the changing societal preferences for particular measures, yet also the involvement of individual actors/stakeholders, and their differing views. The case eventually crystallized into the "dam versus polder" dispute; concerned by the repercussions for the local landscape, a joint initiative of NGOs, local activists, and politicians not only opposed the dam variant proposed by the state river basin administration but also succeeded in pushing through the alternative scheme of side dry polder...
April 26, 2024: Ambio
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38653868/from-the-question-how-to-act-in-a-sustainable-manner-back-to-the-question-why-we-act-unsustainably
#6
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Else Ragni Yttredal, Jörg Löffler, Kenneth M Tschorn
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
April 23, 2024: Ambio
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38653867/exploring-the-performance-of-protected-areas-in-alleviating-future-human-pressure
#7
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Qiqi Liu, Xiaolan Tang, Tian Hang, Yunfei Wu, Yuanyuan Liu, Tianrui Song, Youngkeun Song
Protected areas (PAs) are effective in mitigating human pressures, yet their future pressure alleviating effects remain unclear. In this study, we employed the ConvLSTM model to forecast the future human footprint and analyzed human pressure trends using Theil-Sen median and Mann-Kendall tests. We further evaluated the mitigating effects of PAs within their buffer zones (1-10 km) and the contributions of different IUCN categories of PAs to mitigating human pressure using linear regression models. The results indicate that by 2035, the average human pressure value is expected to increase by 11%, with trends exhibiting a polarized pattern...
April 23, 2024: Ambio
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38652237/the-social-ecological-ladder-of-restoration-ambition
#8
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Marina Frietsch, Manuel Pacheco-Romero, Vicky M Temperton, Beth A Kaplin, Joern Fischer
Expanding in both scope and scale, ecosystem restoration needs to embrace complex social-ecological dynamics. To help scientists and practitioners navigate ever new demands on restoration, we propose the "social-ecological ladder of restoration ambition" as a conceptual model to approach dynamically shifting social and ecological restoration goals. The model focuses on three dynamic aspects of restoration, namely degrading processes, restoration goals and remedial actions. As these three change through time, new reinforcing and balancing feedback mechanisms characterize the restoration process...
April 23, 2024: Ambio
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38647618/dynamic-livelihoods-gender-and-poverty-in-marine-protected-areas-case-study-from-zanzibar-tanzania
#9
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Felicity Pike, Lars Lindström, Josefin Ekstedt, Narriman S Jiddawi, Maricela de la Torre-Castro
Livelihood initiatives are common within marine protected areas (MPAs) aiming for poverty alleviation or higher income opportunities. However, results can be mixed in reality, as well as change over time. Furthermore, who benefits is a key consideration, as results can vary based on inequalities, including gender. Here, the monetary outcomes of different livelihood strategies were investigated across three MPA regions in Zanzibar, Tanzania. Using a quantitative approach, the results show that livelihoods have shifted in a six-year period, with livelihood strategies differing in poverty incidence and income...
April 22, 2024: Ambio
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38643345/forging-just-ecologies-25-years-of-urban-long-term-ecological-research-collaboration
#10
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Morgan Grove, Steward Pickett, Christopher G Boone, Geoffrey L Buckley, Pippin Anderson, Fushcia-Ann Hoover, Ariel E Lugo, Elvia Meléndez-Ackerman, Tischa A Muñoz-Erickson, Harini Nagendra, L Kidany Selles
We ask how environmental justice and urban ecology have influenced one another over the past 25 years in the context of the US Long-Term Ecological Research (LTER) program and Baltimore Ecosystem Study (BES) project. BES began after environmental justice emerged through activism and scholarship in the 1980s but spans a period of increasing awareness among ecologists and environmental practitioners. The work in Baltimore provides a detailed example of how ecological research has been affected by a growing understanding of environmental justice...
April 20, 2024: Ambio
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38643344/from-urban-ecology-to-urban-enquiry-how-to-build-cumulative-and-context-sensitive-understandings
#11
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Erik Andersson, Timon McPhearson, Steward T A Pickett
This paper positions urban ecology as increasingly conversant with multiple perspectives and methods for understanding the functions and qualities of diverse cities and urban situations. Despite progress in the field, we need clear pathways for positioning, connecting and synthesising specific knowledge and to make it speak to more systemic questions about cities and the life within them. These pathways need to be able to make use of diverse sources of information to better account for the diverse relations between people, other species and the ecological, social, cultural, economic, technical and increasingly digital structures that they are embedded in...
April 20, 2024: Ambio
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38643343/a-transformative-shift-in-urban-ecology-toward-a-more-active-and-relevant-future-for-the-field-and-for-cities
#12
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Niki Frantzeskaki, Daniel L Childers, Steward Pickett, Fushcia-Ann Hoover, Pippin Anderson, Aliyu Barau, Joshua Ginsberg, Morgan Grove, Marleen Lodder, Ariel E Lugo, Timon McPhearson, Tischa A Muñoz-Erickson, Mien Quartier, Selina Schepers, Ayyoob Sharifi, Katrien van de Sijpe
This paper builds on the expansion of urban ecology from a biologically based discipline-ecology in the city-to an increasingly interdisciplinary field-ecology of the city-to a transdisciplinary, knowledge to action endeavor-an ecology for and with the city. We build on this "prepositional journey" by proposing a transformative shift in urban ecology, and we present a framework for how the field may continue this shift. We conceptualize that urban ecology is in a state of flux, and that this shift is needed to transform urban ecology into a more engaged and action based field, and one that includes a diversity of actors willing to participate in the future of their cities...
April 20, 2024: Ambio
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38643342/shifts-in-urban-ecology-from-science-to-social-project
#13
EDITORIAL
Niki Frantzeskaki, Steward T A Pickett, Erik Andersson
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
April 20, 2024: Ambio
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38643341/the-relational-shift-in-urban-ecology-from-place-and-structures-to-multiple-modes-of-coproduction-for-positive-urban-futures
#14
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Steward T A Pickett, AbdouMaliq T Simone, Pippin Anderson, Ayyoob Sharifi, Aliyu Barau, Fushcia-Ann Hoover, Daniel L Childers, Timon McPhearson, Tischa A Muñoz-Erickson, Chantal Pacteau, Morgan Grove, Niki Frantzeskaki, Harini Nagendra, Joshua Ginsberg
This perspective emerged from ongoing dialogue among ecologists initiated by a virtual workshop in 2021. A transdisciplinary group of researchers and practitioners conclude that urban ecology as a science can better contribute to positive futures by focusing on relationships, rather than prioritizing urban structures. Insights from other relational disciplines, such as political ecology, governance, urban design, and conservation also contribute. Relationality is especially powerful given the need to rapidly adapt to the changing social and biophysical drivers of global urban systems...
April 20, 2024: Ambio
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38642313/shifting-forward-urban-ecology-in-perspective
#15
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Steward T A Pickett, Niki Frantzeskaki, Erik Andersson, Aliyu Salisu Barau, Daniel L Childers, Fushcia-Ann Hoover, Ariel E Lugo, Timon McPhearson, Harini Nagendra, Selina Schepers, Ayyoob Sharifi
The world has become urban; cities increasingly shape our worldviews, relation to other species, and the large-scale, long-term decisions we make. Cities are nature, but they need to align better with other ecosystems to avoid accelerating climate change and loss of biodiversity. We need a science to guide urban development across the diverse realities of global cities. This need can be met, in part, by shifts in urban ecology and its linkages to related sciences. This perspective is a "synthesis of syntheses", consolidating ideas from the other articles in the Special Section...
April 20, 2024: Ambio
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38632210/building-a-decision-support-tool-to-inform-sustainability-approaches-under-complexity-case-study-on-managing-wild-ruminants
#16
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Paul Griesberger, Florian Kunz, Klaus Hackländer, Brady Mattsson
In wildlife management, differing perspectives among stakeholders generate conflicts about how to achieve disparate sustainability goals that include ecological, economic, and sociocultural dimensions. To mitigate such conflicts, decisions regarding wildlife management must be taken thoughtfully. To our knowledge, there exists no integrative modeling framework to inform these decisions, considering all dimensions of sustainability. We constructed a decision-support tool based on stakeholder workshops and a Bayesian decision network to inform management of wild ruminants in the federal state of Lower Austria...
April 17, 2024: Ambio
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38613747/causes-and-consequences-of-tipping-points-in-river-delta-social-ecological-systems
#17
REVIEW
Emilie Cremin, Cai J T Ladd, Thorsten Balke, Sumana Banerjee, Ly H Bui, Tuhin Ghosh, Andy Large, Hue Thi Van Le, Kien V Nguyen, Lan X Nguyen, Tanh T N Nguyen, Vinh Nguyen, Indrajit Pal, Sylvia Szabo, Ha Tran, Zita Sebesvari, Shah Alam Khan, Fabrice G Renaud
The sustainability of social-ecological systems within river deltas globally is in question as rapid development and environmental change trigger "negative" or "positive" tipping points depending on actors' perspectives, e.g. regime shift from abundant sediment deposition to sediment shortage, agricultural sustainability to agricultural collapse or shift from rural to urban land use. Using a systematic review of the literature, we show how cascading effects across anthropogenic, ecological, and geophysical processes have triggered numerous tipping points in the governance, hydrological, and land-use management of the world's river deltas...
April 13, 2024: Ambio
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38613746/climate-change-cultural-continuity-and-ecological-grief-insights-from-the-s%C3%A3-mi-homeland
#18
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Inkeri Markkula, Minna Turunen, Taru Rikkonen, Sirpa Rasmus, Veina Koski, Jeffrey M Welker
Arctic regions are warming significantly faster than other parts of the globe, leading to changes in snow, ice and weather conditions, ecosystems and local cultures. These changes have brought worry and concern and triggered feelings of loss among Arctic Indigenous Peoples and local communities. Recently, research has started to address emotional and social dimensions of climate change, framed through the concept of ecological grief. In this study, we examine sociocultural impacts of climate change and expressions of ecological grief among members of reindeer herding communities in the Sámi Homeland in Finland...
April 13, 2024: Ambio
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38600246/trajectories-of-socio-ecological-systems-a-case-study-in-the-tropical-andes
#19
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Linda Berrio-Giraldo, Clara Villegas-Palacio, Santiago Arango-Aramburo, Lina Berrouet
Scenario and policy assessments in socioeconomic and environmental studies face significant challenges in socio-ecological systems (SES). There are a limited number of studies that have looked at the impact of different scenarios within integrated approaches, and many have used a static approach with a single driver of change. The present work analyzes the SES dynamics for a strategic basin in the Colombian Andes when implementing and analyzing scenarios and policies related to land cover and land use change using a system dynamics simulation model...
April 10, 2024: Ambio
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38600245/mammal-recovery-inside-and-outside-terrestrial-protected-areas
#20
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Katherine M Magoulick, Vanessa Hull, Jianguo Liu
Protected areas are a key component of global conservation, and the world is aiming to increase protected areas to cover 30% of land and water through the 30 × 30 Initiative under the Post-2020 Global Biodiversity Framework. However, factors affecting their success or failure in regard to promoting mammal population recovery are not well studied, particularly using quantitative approaches comparing across diverse taxa, biomes, and countries. To better understand how protected areas contribute to mammalian recovery, we conducted an analysis of 2706 mammal populations both inside and outside of protected areas worldwide...
April 10, 2024: Ambio
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