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Mestrado em Engenharia do Ambiente / Master in Environmental Engineering Gestão de Ambiente e Território / Environment and Territory Management 4/2 4 Resilience Thresholds in resources use Carrying capacity and limits of acceptable change Prof. Doutora Maria do Rosário Partidário BIBLIOGRAPHY! Jackson, Tim, 2009, Prosperity without Growth - economics for a finite planet. Earthscan. London.! Almeida, Fernando, 2007, Os Desafios da Sustentabilidade - uma ruptura urgente, Elsevier, Rio de Janeiro.! Coccossis, H. and Mexa, A. (Eds), 2004, The challenge of tourism carrying capacity assessment – theory and practice, Ashgate, Aldershot.! Holling, C.S. 1978. Adaptive environmental assessment and management. (Editor) London: John Wiley & Sons.! Kozlowski, J. , 1986, Thresholds Approach in Urban and Regional and Environmental Planning. University of Queensland Press, St. Lucia, London, New York.! Meadows, D; D. Meadows. e J. Randers, 1993, Além dos Limites da catástrofe total ao futuro sustentável, Difusão Cultural, Lisboa! SOWMAN, Mark R. (1987), A procedure for assessing recreational carrying capacity of costal resort areas Landscape and Urban Planning, 14: 331-344! HOMOEOSTASIS (HOMO = SAME; EOSTASIS =STATE) or RESILIENCE CAPACITY the tendency toward a relatively stable equilibrium between interdependent elements, esp. as maintained by physiological processes. Resilience is... The ability to absorb disturbances, to be changed and then to re-organise and still have the same identity (retain the same basic structure and ways of functioning). It includes the ability to learn from the disturbance. Resilience shifts attention from purely growth and efficiency to needed recovery and flexibility. http://www.resalliance.org/564.php The adaptive cycle Fore-loop and back-loop Source: (originally CS Holling, Adaptive Management Systems) The Resilience Alliance http://rs.resalliance.org/wp-content/uploads/2007/02/4box-adaptive-cycle.gif) Ecological research has shown that, depending on environmental conditions, an ecosystem can have different stable states. A perturbation, be it a sudden event or a slow cumulative process, can cause the ecosystem to shift to an alternate stable state. Going back to the former state requires significant effort or energy. Resilience thinking applies the same concept to social-ecological systems. (Source: Scheffer et al., 2001). AUTO-REGULATORY CAPACITY Capacity of individuals to maintain its functional stability and organic integrity in face of a destructive environment, and at same time ensuring the renovation of its components ADAPTATION Outcome of natural selection over the genotypes in species population Adaptation results from the interaction of genetic factors and environmental selective factors Natural selection can conduct to adaptation as well as to extinction VALUE Meaning; Utility; Satisfaction Meaning of a resource in a complex context, integrating factors such as: rarity, distinction, particularities functional viability and local and regional meaning in the market SENSITIVITY Corresponds to the probability of degradation of attributes, of functionality and the consequent capacity of performing services RED LIST OF THREATNED SPECIES 2010.4 About Initiatives News Photos Partners Sponsors Login | Feedback | FAQ | Terms of use | IUCN.org Resources Enter Red List search term(s) IUCN A users' guide to The IUCN Red List web site 03 April 2009 - In October 2008, the IUCN Red List web site was given a brand new look. 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This also means that the site has more detailed search pages that... more The 25 most endangered turtles and tortoises 04 March 2011 - Without concerted conservation action, many of the planet’s turtles and tortoises, iconic survivors from the Age of Dinosaurs, will become extinct within the next few decades.... more Global Search for 'lost' frogs yields few findings, important warnings 18 February 2011 - Concerns Raised about Species' Future as Unprecedented Search for Threatened Amphibians Finds 15 'Missing' Species — including new Rediscoveries in India & Ecuador — but Falls... more Mystery of Brown Bears in Syria 18 February 2011 - Various written accounts and artefacts indicate that the Syrian Bear (Ursus arctos syriacus), a subspecies of the Brown Bear (Ursus arctos), once ranged throughout the Middle... more Year of the Rabbit – species hopping out of view? 12 February 2011 - Celebrations begin on Thursday 3 February 2011 to mark the Chinese New Year and the start of the Year of the Rabbit. However, as we enter this new cycle in the Chinese zodiac,... more Home | Contact | FAQ | Feedback | Site Map | Donate Now Privacy & Security | Terms of Use © International Union for Conservation of Nature and Natural Resources. CERUCHUS CHRYSOMELINUS Ceruchus chrysomelinus © Stanislav Krejcik RESOURCES MULTIFUNCIONALITY WETLAND FUNCTIONS (SERVICES) Recharge / download of groundwater; Change in flooding regimes; Sediments stabilization/ coastline stability; Sediments retention/ toxic substances; Deposition of CO2 , CH4, NOx, etc. Nutrients processing/ water quality; Production and basis of the food chain; Wildlife habitat / nursery; Fisheries Cultural Heritage Recreation and leisure Scientifc CARRYING CAPACITY BIOLOGY: Relationship between the resources basis, the environmental assimilation and rehabilitation capacity and the species biotic capacity ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT: Supporting capacity of natural resources without changing their key characteristics and functionalities PLANNING AND MANAGEMENT: Explains the level of human activity that a region can sustain for a quality of life indefinitly acceptable Capacity of a natural or artificial system to absorbe populational growth without significant degradation The question of limits (Tim Jackson, 2009) Three distinct phases: late 18th century - raised by Parson Thomas Robert Malthus, Essay on Population – sooner or later population expands beyond the “means of subsistence” and some people – the poorest inevitably – will suffer. However the fact is that global population is now six times bigger and the economy 68 times bigger than it was in 1800 – technological changes explain the difference 1970’s - Club of Rome, Limits to Growth – sooner or later the resource base would collapse (due to resource extraction rates and available reserves) and with it the potential for continued economic activity – turning points (peak points) when this would arrive. Resource scarcities before the Millennium did not happen as expected, but they were not too far currently – climate change and peak oil – problem of “sinks” – the capacity of the planet to “assimilate” the environmental impacts of economic activity. Climate change is one of these sink problems. Though it came late to the party, the climate may turn out to be the mother of all limits Beyond limits (Tim Jackson, 2009) Ecological limits linked to resource scarcity or climate change include: rapid deforestation biodiversity loss collapse of fish stocks water scarcity pollution of soil and water supplies 60% of the world ecosystem services have been degraded or over-used since the mod-20th century In the same period of time the global economy has grown more than 5 times. If growth rate continues it will be 80 times bigger in 2100 than it was in 1950. Carrying Capacity classification (UK Countryside Commission, 1970) PHYSICAL CARRYING CAPACITY – max nr of (individuals, boats, vehicles) that can be physically accomodated in a given area e.g. Parking area, reservoir water plan ECONOMIC CARRYING CAPACITY Maximum use that enables economic feasibility of resources potential uses e.g. Recreational use, oysters exploitation ECOLOGICAL CARRYING CAPACITY Max pop that can be indefinitely supported in an habitat without affecting the productivity of that ecosystem (Rees, 1988) e.g. Safaris, coastal maritime use SOCIAL CARRYING CAPACITY Maximum level of use above which there is a decline in the quality of experience sensed by the user (Pigrim, 1983) Related to an individual perception in relation to the presence or absence of other users e.g. hicking, yacht race Carrying capacity models (Meadows, 2002) Sustainable yield curve: Natural resources economic Tourism carrying capacity (Butler, 1980) Case study: application to carrying capacity, POOC , Sado-Sines OBJECTIVES AND STRUCTURE OF OF AREA DEVELOPMENT INVENTORY OF RESOURCES AND CHARACTERIZ (Value and sensitivity) IDENTIFICATION OF UNITS IN STUDY AREA (Condicionants + Opportunities) INVENTORY OF SPECIFIC DEMAND OF ACTIVITIES DEVELOPMENT MODEL FOR THE AREA ANALYSIS OF CARRYING CAPACITY/ ISSUES AND THRESHOLDS ASSESSMENT OF POTENTIAL DEVELOPMENT ASSESSMENT OF POTENTIAL CONSERVATION LIMITS OF ACCEPTABLE CHANGE Concept that attempts to overcome the technical limits of the carrying capacity concept, taking advantage of its political opportunity Reformulated approaches to carrying capacity, that attenmpts to integrate social dimensions. Enables the consideration of the interaction between natural and human systems, at any level: from thresholds objectively assessed to desirable or political acceptable conditions. Objective management approaches INTEREST IN LEARNING ABOUT CARRYING CAPACITY / LIMITS OF ACCEPTABLE CHANGE Development strategies Relationship environmental degradation – human activity Priorities setting in response to population growth pressures