Shifting Baselines to Thresholds: Reframing Exploitation in the Marine Environment

FRONTIERS IN MARINE SCIENCE(2021)

Cited 7|Views18
No score
Abstract
Current research on anthropogenic impacts on marine ecosystems often relies on the concept of a "baseline," which aims to describe ecosystems prior to human contact. Recent research is increasingly showing that humans have been involved in marine ecosystems for much longer than previously understood. We propose a theoretical framework oriented around a system of "thresholds" referring to system-wide changes in human culture, ecosystem dynamics, and molecular evolution. The concept of the threshold allows conceptual space to account for the fluid nature of ecosystems throughout time while providing a critical framework for understanding drivers of ecosystem change. We highlight practical research approaches for exploring thresholds in the past and provide key insights for future adaptation to a changing world. To ensure ecological and societal goals for the future are met, it is critical that research efforts are contextualized into a framework that incorporates human society as integral to ecology and evolution.
More
Translated text
Key words
ecology,ancient biomolecules,evolution,conservation,thresholds,sustainability
AI Read Science
Must-Reading Tree
Example
Generate MRT to find the research sequence of this paper
Chat Paper
Summary is being generated by the instructions you defined