Abstract

Vogt, J. M., G. B. Epstein, S. K. Mincey, B. C. Fischer, and P. McCord. 2015. Putting the "E" in SES: unpacking the ecology in the Ostrom social-ecological system framework. Ecology and Society 20(1): 55. https://doi.org/10.5751/ES-07239-200155

Highlights

  • In recent years, trends toward increasing specialization to resolve environmental problems have abated and even reversed, reflecting growing evidence that social and ecological systems are inextricably linked

  • We suggest that the general absence of ecological considerations within the social-ecological system (SES) framework stems from the continuing absence of a meaningful interdisciplinary dialogue and vocabulary

  • Pure species abundance is similar to importance values, with sugar maple having more than three times the tree stem density of the densest tree species and American beech having more than twice the sapling density of any other sapling species

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Summary

Introduction

Trends toward increasing specialization to resolve environmental problems have abated and even reversed, reflecting growing evidence that social and ecological systems are inextricably linked.

Results
Conclusion
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