4.7 Review

Toward a network perspective in coastal ecosystem management

Journal

JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT
Volume 346, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS LTD- ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jenvman.2023.119007

Keywords

Synergistic; Antagonistic; Multiple lines of evidence; Tipping points; Regime shifts; Ecosystem interaction networks

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This article discusses how an ecological understanding of network interactions in coastal marine ecosystems can improve environmental management. The authors list and describe four characteristics of marine ecosystem interaction networks and link them to three case studies of common coastal environmental issues to demonstrate the applicability of this approach even with limited data.
Environmental management in coastal ecosystems has been challenged by the complex cumulative effects that occur when many small issues result in large ecological shifts. Current environmental management of these spaces focuses on identifying and limiting problematic stressors via a series of assessment techniques. Whilst there is a strong desire among managers to consider complexity in ecological responses to cumulative effects, current approaches for assessing risk focus on breaking down the issues into multiple cause and effect relationships. However, uncertainty arises when data and information for a place are limited, as is commonly the case, and this creates decision paralysis while more information is generated. Here, we discuss how ecological understanding of network interactions in coastal marine ecosystems can be used as a lens to bring together multiple lines of evidence and create actions. We list and describe four characteristics of marine ecosystem interaction networks including the possibility for; 1) indirect effects, 2) effects that emerge as stressor magnitude increases the number of network components implicated, 3) network interactions that amplify these indirect effects, and 4) feedbacks that reinforce or stabilise against indirect effects. We then link these four characteristics to three case studies of common coastal environmental issues to demonstrate how a general understanding of ecological interaction networks can enhance priorities for stressor management that can be applied even when specific data is limited.

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