14 Facts About Ecosystem management

1.

Ecosystem management is an approach to natural resource management that aims to ensure the long-term sustainability and persistence of an ecosystems function and services while meeting socioeconomic, political, and cultural needs.

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2.

In contrast to command and control approaches to natural resource management, which often lead to declines in ecological resilience, ecosystem management is a holistic, adaptive method for evaluating and achieving resilience and sustainability.

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3.

For example, Robert T Lackey emphasizes that ecosystem management is informed by ecological and social factors, motivated by societal benefits, and implemented over a specific timeframe and area.

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4.

Peter Brussard and colleagues suggest ecosystem management balances preserving ecosystem health while sustaining human needs.

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5.

Fundamental principle of ecosystem management is the long-term sustainability of the production of goods and services by ecosystems, as "intergenerational sustainability [is] a precondition for management, not an afterthought".

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Adaptive management
6.

Sustainable ecosystem management approaches have been used by societies throughout human history.

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7.

Further, underlying traditional natural resource management is the view that each ecosystem has a single equilibrium and minimizing variation around this equilibrium results in more dependable, greater yields of natural resources.

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8.

Ecosystem management stakeholders fall into the following groups based on their diverse concerns:.

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9.

Complexity of ecosystem management decisions, ranging from local to international scales, requires the participation of stakeholders with diverse understandings, perceptions, and values of ecosystems and ecosystem services.

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10.

In 1989, led by a municipal organization, a collaborative management strategy was adopted, involving diverse stakeholders concerned with the ecological, social, and economic facets of the ecosystem.

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11.

Term natural resource management is frequently used in relation to a particular resource for human use, rather than the management of a whole ecosystem.

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12.

Natural resource management aims to fulfill the societal demand for a given resource without causing harm to the ecosystem, or jeopardizing the future of the resource.

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13.

Adaptive management is based on the concept that predicting future influences and disturbances to an ecosystem is limited and unclear.

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14.

Similar to other methods of ecosystem management, strategic management prioritizes evaluating and reviewing any impacts of management intervention on an ecosystem, and flexibility in adapting management protocols as a result of new information.

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