Abstract

With globally accelerating rates of environmental disturbance, coastal marine ecosystems are increasingly prone to non-linear regime shifts that result in a loss of ecosystem function and services. A lack of early-detection methods, and an over reliance on limits-based approaches means that these tipping points manifest as surprises. Consequently, marine ecosystems are notoriously difficult to manage, and scientists, managers and policy makers are paralyzed in a spiral of ecosystem degradation. This paralysis is caused by the inherent need to quantify the risk and uncertainty that surrounds every decision. While progress towards forecasting tipping points is ongoing and important, an interim approach is desperately needed to enable scientists to make recommendations that are credible and defensible in the face of deep uncertainty. We discuss how current tools for developing risk assessments and scenario planning, coupled with expert opinions, can be adapted to bridge gaps in quantitative data, enabling scientists and managers to prepare for many plausible futures. We argue that these tools are currently underutilized in a marine cumulative effects context but offer a way to inform decisions in the interim while predictive models and early warning signals remain imperfect. This approach will require redefining the way we think about managing for ecological surprise to include actions that not only limit drivers of tipping points but increase socio-ecological resilience to yield satisfactory outcomes under multiple possible futures that are inherently uncertain.

Highlights

  • Global change is having unprecedented impacts on marine ecosystems and human well-being (Vitousek et al, 1997; Costanza et al, 2014; Rocha et al, 2015)

  • The cumulative effects of multiple drivers of change can cause non-linear shifts in ecosystem functions and services, known as tipping points or regime shifts

  • Intensifying human pressures increase the number and strength of extrinsic drivers on marine ecosystems (IPBES, 2018) and are likely to raise the frequency of tipping points (Drijfhout et al, 2015; Rocha et al, 2015)

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Summary

Introduction

Global change is having unprecedented impacts on marine ecosystems and human well-being (Vitousek et al, 1997; Costanza et al, 2014; Rocha et al, 2015). We need an approach that is not limited to cause-and-effect relationships, known probabilities, and quantifiable levels of uncertainty, but rather one that considers the possibility of different socio-ecological changes in the context of multiple plausible futures.

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