Authors
F Stuart Chapin, Stephen R Carpenter, Gary P Kofinas, Carl Folke, Nick Abel, William C Clark, Per Olsson, D Mark Stafford Smith, Brian Walker, Oran R Young, Fikret Berkes, Reinette Biggs, J Morgan Grove, Rosamond L Naylor, Evelyn Pinkerton, Will Steffen, Frederick J Swanson
Publication date
2010/4/1
Source
Trends in ecology & evolution
Volume
25
Issue
4
Pages
241-249
Publisher
Elsevier
Description
Ecosystem stewardship is an action-oriented framework intended to foster the social–ecological sustainability of a rapidly changing planet. Recent developments identify three strategies that make optimal use of current understanding in an environment of inevitable uncertainty and abrupt change: reducing the magnitude of, and exposure and sensitivity to, known stresses; focusing on proactive policies that shape change; and avoiding or escaping unsustainable social–ecological traps. As we discuss here, all social–ecological systems are vulnerable to recent and projected changes but have sources of adaptive capacity and resilience that can sustain ecosystem services and human well-being through active ecosystem stewardship.
Total citations
20102011201220132014201520162017201820192020202120222023202418537183102115102988490108766610034
Scholar articles
FS Chapin, SR Carpenter, GP Kofinas, C Folke, N Abel… - Trends in ecology & evolution, 2010