Authors
Robyn S Wilson, David J Hardisty, Rebecca S Epanchin‐Niell, Michael C Runge, Kathryn L Cottingham, Dean L Urban, Lynn A Maguire, Alan Hastings, Peter J Mumby, Debra PC Peters
Publication date
2016/2
Journal
Conservation Biology
Volume
30
Issue
1
Pages
42-49
Description
Ecological systems often operate on time scales significantly longer or shorter than the time scales typical of human decision making, which causes substantial difficulty for conservation and management in socioecological systems. For example, invasive species may move faster than humans can diagnose problems and initiate solutions, and climate systems may exhibit long‐term inertia and short‐term fluctuations that obscure learning about the efficacy of management efforts in many ecological systems. We adopted a management‐decision framework that distinguishes decision makers within public institutions from individual actors within the social system, calls attention to the ways socioecological systems respond to decision makers’ actions, and notes institutional learning that accrues from observing these responses. We used this framework, along with insights from bedeviling conservation problems, to …
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