U.S. Natural Resources and Climate Change: Concepts and Approaches for Management Adaptation

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.”

[1]  C. S. Holling,et al.  Resilience, Adaptability and Transformability in Social–ecological Systems , 2004 .

[2]  D. Olivieri Environmental Management , 2006 .

[3]  Stephen H. Schneider,et al.  Wildlife Responses to Climate Change: North American Case Studies , 2001 .

[4]  Colin Ryall,et al.  Principles of conservation biology , 1998 .

[5]  J. Houghton,et al.  Climate change 2001 : the scientific basis , 2001 .

[6]  D. Richardson,et al.  Novel ecosystems: theoretical and management aspects of the new ecological world order , 2006 .

[7]  R. Kerr How Hot Will the Greenhouse World Be? , 2005, Science.

[8]  J. Palutikof,et al.  Climate change 2007: Impacts, Adaptation and Vulnerability. Contribution of Working Group II to the Fourth Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. Summary for Policymakers. , 2007 .

[9]  Karen L. McLeod,et al.  Solving the Crisis in Ocean Governance: Place-Based Management of Marine Ecosystems , 2007 .

[10]  R. Kerr Climate change. Three degrees of consensus. , 2004, Science.

[11]  H. L. Miller,et al.  Climate Change 2007: The Physical Science Basis , 2007 .

[12]  G. Cumming Synthesis and Conclusions , 2011 .

[13]  S. Carpenter,et al.  Catastrophic regime shifts in ecosystems: linking theory to observation , 2003 .

[14]  Robert J. Lempert,et al.  Do We Need Better Predictions to Adapt to a Changing Climate , 2009 .

[15]  R. Gregory,et al.  Deconstructing adaptive management: criteria for applications to environmental management. , 2006, Ecological applications : a publication of the Ecological Society of America.

[16]  George H. Stankey,et al.  Adaptive Management and the Northwest Forest Plan: Rhetoric and Reality , 2003 .

[17]  Stephen R. Carpenter,et al.  Scenario Planning: a Tool for Conservation in an Uncertain World , 2003, Conservation Biology.

[18]  Gary Yohe,et al.  moving toward a working definition of adaptive capacity , 2002 .

[19]  R. Kasperson,et al.  A framework for vulnerability analysis in sustainability science , 2003, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.

[20]  G. E. Dixon Essential FVS: A User's Guide to the Forest Vegetation Simulator , 2007 .

[21]  R. Emson,et al.  Marine Protected Areas , 1995 .

[22]  Carl J. Walters,et al.  ECOLOGICAL OPTIMIZATION AND ADAPTIVE MANAGEMENT , 1978 .

[23]  R. Kerr Three Degrees of Consensus , 2004, Science.

[24]  K. Bjorndal,et al.  Historical Overfishing and the Recent Collapse of Coastal Ecosystems , 2001, Science.

[25]  E. Malone,et al.  Adaptation Policy Frameworks for Climate Change: Developing Strategies, Policies and Measures , 2004 .

[26]  Steven D. Gaines,et al.  Marine community ecology , 2001 .

[27]  J. P. Grime,et al.  The response of two contrasting limestone grasslands to simulated climate change. , 2000, Science.

[28]  James Tansey,et al.  Adaptive Management of the Global Climate Problem: Bridging the Gap Between Climate Research and Climate Policy , 2006 .

[29]  Virginia Burkett,et al.  Nonlinear dynamics in ecosystem response to climatic change: Case studies and policy implications , 2005 .

[30]  M. Hall,et al.  Modeled Climate-Induced Glacier Change in Glacier National Park, 1850–2100 , 2003 .

[31]  E. Ostrom,et al.  The Struggle to Govern the Commons , 2003, Science.

[32]  Monica G. Turner,et al.  Ecological Thresholds: The Key to Successful Environmental Management or an Important Concept with No Practical Application? , 2006, Ecosystems.

[33]  Gary K. Meffe,et al.  Principles of Conservation Biology , 1995 .

[34]  T. Carter,et al.  IPCC technical guidelines for assessing climate change impacts and adaptations : part of the IPCC special report to the first session of the conference of the parties to the UN framework convention on climate change , 1994 .

[35]  S. Schneider,et al.  Climate Change : Overview and Implications for Wildlife , 2001 .

[36]  Eric R. Pianka,et al.  On r- and K-Selection , 1970, The American Naturalist.

[37]  L. Gunderson Ecological Resilience—In Theory and Application , 2000 .

[38]  Stephen R. Carpenter,et al.  Management of eutrophication for lakes subject to potentially irreversible change , 1999 .

[39]  C. S. Holling Resilience and Stability of Ecological Systems , 1973 .

[40]  W. Moir,et al.  Adaptive Management on Public Lands in the United States: Commitment or Rhetoric? , 2001, Environmental management.

[41]  S. Stephens,et al.  Climate change and forests of the future: managing in the face of uncertainty. , 2007, Ecological applications : a publication of the Ecological Society of America.

[42]  W. Neil Adger,et al.  Does Adaptive Management of Natural Resources Enhance Resilience to Climate Change , 2004 .

[43]  H. Birks,et al.  What Is Natural? The Need for a Long-Term Perspective in Biodiversity Conservation , 2006, Science.

[44]  E. M. Bennett,et al.  A Systems Model Approach to Determining Resilience Surrogates for Case Studies , 2005, Ecosystems.

[45]  H P Possingham,et al.  Assisted Colonization and Rapid Climate Change , 2008, Science.

[46]  R. Salm,et al.  Coral reef resilience and resistance to bleaching , 2005 .

[47]  Hanna Kokko,et al.  From Individual Dispersal to Species Ranges: Perspectives for a Changing World , 2006, Science.

[48]  G. Cumming Global biodiversity scenarios and landscape ecology , 2007, Landscape Ecology.

[49]  Peter Schwartz,et al.  The Art of the Long View: Planning for the Future in an Uncertain World , 1996 .

[50]  E. Zavaleta,et al.  Biodiversity management in the face of climate change: A review of 22 years of recommendations , 2009 .

[51]  Garry D. Peterson,et al.  Scenarios for Ecosystem Services: An Overview , 2006 .

[52]  Robin Gregory,et al.  Using decision analysis to encourage sound deliberation: water use planning in British Columbia, Canada , 2002 .

[53]  R. Rayfuse Protecting Marine Biodiversity in Polar Areas Beyond National Jurisdiction , 2008 .

[54]  T. Lovejoy Climate change and biodiversity. , 2008, Revue scientifique et technique.

[55]  Carl J. Walters,et al.  Adaptive Management of Renewable Resources , 1986 .

[56]  R. Pulwarty,et al.  Assessment of adaptation practices, options, constraints and capacity , 2007 .

[57]  P. Levin,et al.  Integrated Ecosystem Assessments: Developing the Scientific Basis for Ecosystem-Based Management of the Ocean , 2009, PLoS biology.

[58]  Aaron F. Wells THE NATIONAL FORESTS. , 1915, Science.

[59]  Klaus Leidorf Environmental Governance, , 2007 .

[60]  D. Pauly Anecdotes and the shifting baseline syndrome of fisheries. , 1995, Trends in ecology & evolution.

[61]  C. S. Holling Adaptive Environmental Assessment and Management , 2005 .

[62]  N. Reynard,et al.  Climate adaptation: Risk, uncertainty and decision-making. UKCIP Technical Report , 2003 .

[63]  T. Carter,et al.  This chapter should be cited as: , 2022 .

[64]  L. Hannah,et al.  Climate change‐integrated conservation strategies , 2002 .

[65]  David Salt,et al.  Resilience Thinking : Sustaining Ecosystems and People in a Changing World , 2017 .

[66]  R. Leemans,et al.  A Multidisciplinary multi-scale framework for assessing vulnerability to global change , 2004 .

[67]  Margaret A. Palmer,et al.  Preliminary Review of Adaptation Options for Climate-Sensitive Ecosystems and Resources , 2008 .

[68]  T. Johnson,et al.  A Framework for Assessing Climate Change Impacts on Water and Watershed Systems , 2009, Environmental management.

[69]  S. Carpenter,et al.  Catastrophic shifts in ecosystems , 2001, Nature.

[70]  T. Wilbanks,et al.  Contribution of Working Group II to the Fourth Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change , 2007 .