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Athias, J.-D. -., Anderies, J. M., Crépin, A.-S., Dambrun, M., Lindahl, T. & Norberg, J. (2024). Emergence of social-psychological barriers to social-ecological resilience: from causes to solutions. Ecology and Society, 29(2), Article ID 6.
Open this publication in new window or tab >>Emergence of social-psychological barriers to social-ecological resilience: from causes to solutions
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2024 (English)In: Ecology and Society, E-ISSN 1708-3087, Vol. 29, no 2, article id 6Article in journal (Refereed) Published
Abstract [en]

This study explores social-psychological barriers that may affect resilience in the context of sustainability. These barriers can be understood as unobserved processes that reduce the capacity of a social-ecological system to recover after a perturbation or transformation. Analyzing social-psychological processes enables us to distinguish passive and active processes, at the individual and collective levels. Our work suggests that interacting social and psychological processes should be considered as dynamically evolving determinants of resilience, especially when perturbations can change the psychology of individuals, and thus the underlying dynamics of social-ecological systems. Hence, considering social-psychological barriers and the conditions under which they emerge may provide decision makers with useful insights for coping with ineluctable uncertainties that reduce systems' transformative capacity and thus their general resilience.

Keywords
desilience, resilience, social -psychological barriers, sustainability
National Category
Public Health, Global Health and Social Medicine
Identifiers
urn:nbn:se:su:diva-231286 (URN)10.5751/ES-15052-290206 (DOI)001229183500002 ()2-s2.0-85194417556 (Scopus ID)
Available from: 2024-06-19 Created: 2024-06-19 Last updated: 2025-02-20Bibliographically approved
Norberg, J., Blenckner, T., Cornell, S. E., Petchey, O. L. & Hillebrand, H. (2022). Failures to disagree are essential for environmental science to effectively influence policy development. Ecology Letters, 25(5), 1075-1093
Open this publication in new window or tab >>Failures to disagree are essential for environmental science to effectively influence policy development
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2022 (English)In: Ecology Letters, ISSN 1461-023X, E-ISSN 1461-0248, Vol. 25, no 5, p. 1075-1093Article in journal (Refereed) Published
Abstract [en]

While environmental science, and ecology in particular, is working to provide better understanding to base sustainable decisions on, the way scientific understanding is developed can at times be detrimental to this cause. Locked-in debates are often unnecessarily polarised and can compromise any common goals of the opposing camps. The present paper is inspired by a resolved debate from an unrelated field of psychology where Nobel laureate David Kahneman and Garry Klein turned what seemed to be a locked-in debate into a constructive process for their fields. The present paper is also motivated by previous discourses regarding the role of thresholds in natural systems for management and governance, but its scope of analysis targets the scientific process within complex social-ecological systems in general. We identified four features of environmental science that appear to predispose for locked-in debates: (1) The strongly context-dependent behaviour of ecological systems. (2) The dominant role of single hypothesis testing. (3) The high prominence given to theory demonstration compared investigation. (4) The effect of urgent demands to inform and steer policy. This fertile ground is further cultivated by human psychological aspects as well as the structure of funding and publication systems. 

Keywords
biodiversity-ecosystem functioning, context-dependent, critical transitions, locked-in, policy making, science funding agency, scientific method, thresholds, tipping points
National Category
Biological Sciences Earth and Related Environmental Sciences Other Social Sciences
Identifiers
urn:nbn:se:su:diva-202740 (URN)10.1111/ele.13984 (DOI)000760886900001 ()35218290 (PubMedID)2-s2.0-85125943704 (Scopus ID)
Available from: 2022-03-14 Created: 2022-03-14 Last updated: 2025-01-31Bibliographically approved
Baho, D. L., Rizzuto, S., Nizzetto, L., Hessen, D. O., Norberg, J., Skjelbred, B., . . . Leu, E. (2021). Ecological Memory of Historical Contamination Influences the Response of Phytoplankton Communities. Ecosystems (New York. Print), 24(7), 1591-1607
Open this publication in new window or tab >>Ecological Memory of Historical Contamination Influences the Response of Phytoplankton Communities
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2021 (English)In: Ecosystems (New York. Print), ISSN 1432-9840, E-ISSN 1435-0629, Vol. 24, no 7, p. 1591-1607Article in journal (Refereed) Published
Abstract [en]

Ecological memory (EM) recognizes the importance of previous stress encounters in promoting community tolerance and thereby enhances ecosystem stability, provided that gained tolerances are preserved during non-stress periods. Drawing from this concept, we hypothesized that the recruitment of tolerant species can be facilitated by imposing an initial sorting process (conditioning) during the early stages of community assembly, which should result in higher production (biomass development and photosynthetic efficiency) and stable community composition. To test this, phytoplankton resting stages were germinated from lake sediments originating from two catchments that differed in contamination history: one impacted by long-term herbicides and pesticides exposures (historically contaminated lake) from an agricultural catchment compared to a low-impacted one (near-pristine lake) from a forested catchment. Conditioning was achieved by adding an herbicide (Isoproturon, which was commonly used in the catchment of the historically contaminated lake) during germination. Afterward, the communities obtained from germination were exposed to an increasing gradient of Isoproturon. As hypothesized, upon conditioning, the phytoplankton assemblages from the historically contaminated lake were able to rapidly restore photosynthetic efficiency (p > 0.01) and became structurally (community composition) more resistant to Isoproturon. The communities of the near-pristine lake did not yield these positive effects regardless of conditioning, supporting that EM was a unique attribute of the historically stressed ecosystem. Moreover, assemblages that displayed higher structural resistance concurrently yielded lower biomass, indicating that benefits of EM in increasing structural stability may trade-off with production. Our results clearly indicate that EM can foster ecosystem stability to a recurring stressor.

Keywords
Ecological memory, Phytoplankton communities, Stability, Recurrent stressor, Community tolerance, Trade-off
National Category
Biological Sciences
Identifiers
urn:nbn:se:su:diva-193135 (URN)10.1007/s10021-021-00604-0 (DOI)000631303500002 ()
Available from: 2021-05-12 Created: 2021-05-12 Last updated: 2021-11-16Bibliographically approved
Åkesson, A., Curtsdotter, A., Eklöf, A., Ebenman, B., Norberg, J. & Barabás, G. (2021). The importance of species interactions in eco-evolutionary community dynamics under climate change. Nature Communications, 12(1), Article ID 4759.
Open this publication in new window or tab >>The importance of species interactions in eco-evolutionary community dynamics under climate change
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2021 (English)In: Nature Communications, E-ISSN 2041-1723, Vol. 12, no 1, article id 4759Article in journal (Refereed) Published
Abstract [en]

Eco-evolutionary dynamics are essential in shaping the biological response of communities to ongoing climate change. Here we develop a spatially explicit eco-evolutionary framework which features more detailed species interactions, integrating evolution and dispersal. We include species interactions within and between trophic levels, and additionally, we incorporate the feature that species' interspecific competition might change due to increasing temperatures and affect the impact of climate change on ecological communities. Our modeling framework captures previously reported ecological responses to climate change, and also reveals two key results. First, interactions between trophic levels as well as temperature-dependent competition within a trophic level mitigate the negative impact of climate change on biodiversity, emphasizing the importance of understanding biotic interactions in shaping climate change impact. Second, our trait-based perspective reveals a strong positive relationship between the within-community variation in preferred temperatures and the capacity to respond to climate change. Temperature-dependent competition consistently results both in higher trait variation and more responsive communities to altered climatic conditions. Our study demonstrates the importance of species interactions in an eco-evolutionary setting, further expanding our knowledge of the interplay between ecological and evolutionary processes. Understanding the dynamics of species interactions can help predict community responses to climate change. A spatially explicit model finds that species interactions and competition mitigate the harmful impacts of climate change, and that temperature-dependent competition makes communities more variable and responsive to changing climates.

National Category
Biological Sciences
Identifiers
urn:nbn:se:su:diva-197427 (URN)10.1038/s41467-021-24977-x (DOI)000684547900023 ()34362916 (PubMedID)
Available from: 2021-10-03 Created: 2021-10-03 Last updated: 2023-03-28Bibliographically approved
Schill, C., Anderies, J. M., Lindahl, T., Folke, C., Polasky, S., Cárdenas, J. C., . . . Schlüter, M. (2019). A more dynamic understanding of human behaviour for the Anthropocene. Nature Sustainability, 2(12), 1075-1082
Open this publication in new window or tab >>A more dynamic understanding of human behaviour for the Anthropocene
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2019 (English)In: Nature Sustainability, E-ISSN 2398-9629, Vol. 2, no 12, p. 1075-1082Article, review/survey (Refereed) Published
Abstract [en]

Human behaviour is of profound significance in shaping pathways towards sustainability. Yet, the approach to understanding human behaviour in many fields remains reliant on overly simplistic models. For a better understanding of the interface between human behaviour and sustainability, we take work in behavioural economics and cognitive psychology as a starting point, but argue for an expansion of this work by adopting a more dynamic and systemic understanding of human behaviour, that is, as part of complex adaptive systems. A complex adaptive systems approach allows us to capture behaviour as ''enculturated' and 'enearthed', co-evolving with socio-cultural and biophysical contexts. Connecting human behaviour and context through a complex adaptive systems lens is critical to inform environmental governance and management for sustainability, and ultimately to better understand the dynamics of the Anthropocene itself.

National Category
Earth and Related Environmental Sciences Social and Economic Geography
Identifiers
urn:nbn:se:su:diva-177600 (URN)10.1038/s41893-019-0419-7 (DOI)000502144200005 ()
Available from: 2020-01-13 Created: 2020-01-13 Last updated: 2025-01-31Bibliographically approved
Baho, D. L., Pomati, F., Leu, E., Hessen, D. O., Moe, S. J., Norberg, J. & Nizzetto, L. (2019). A single pulse of diffuse contaminants alters the size distribution of natural phytoplankton communities. Science of the Total Environment, 683, 578-588
Open this publication in new window or tab >>A single pulse of diffuse contaminants alters the size distribution of natural phytoplankton communities
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2019 (English)In: Science of the Total Environment, ISSN 0048-9697, E-ISSN 1879-1026, Vol. 683, p. 578-588Article in journal (Refereed) Published
Abstract [en]

The presence of a multitude of bioactive organic pollutants collectively classified as pharmaceuticals and personal care products (PPCPs) in freshwaters is of concern, considering that ecological assessments of their potential impacts on natural systems are still scarce. In this field experiment we tested whether a single pulse exposure to a mixture of 12 pharmaceuticals and personal care products, which are commonly found in European inland waters, can influence the size distributions of natural lake phytoplankton communities. Size is one of the most influential determinants of community structure and functioning, particularly in planktonic communities and food webs. Using an in-situ microcosm approach, phytoplankton communities in two lakes with different nutrient levels (mesotrophic and eutrophic) were exposed to a concentration gradient of the PPCPs mixture at five levels. We tested whether sub-lethal PPCPs doses affect the scaling of organisms' abundances with their size, and the slope of these size spectra, which describe changes in the abundances of small relative to large phytoplankton. Our results showed that a large proportion (approximately 80%) of the dataset followed a power-law distribution, thus suggesting evidence of scale invariance of abundances, as expected in steady state ecosystems. PPCPs were however found to induce significant changes in the size spectra and community structure of natural phytoplankton assemblages. The two highest treatment levels of PPCPs were associated with decreased abundance of the most dominant size class (nano-phytoplankton: 2-5 mu m), leading to a flattening of the size spectra slope. These results suggest that a pulse exposure to PPCPs induce changes that potentially lead to unsteady ecosystem states and cascading effects in the aquatic food webs, by favoring larger non-edible algae at the expense of small edible species. We propose higher susceptibility due to higher surface to volume ratio in small species as the likely cause of these structural changes.

Keywords
Pharmaceutical and personal care products (PPCPs), Micropollutants, Scaling law, Size abundance relationship, Phytoplankton communities, Field experiment
National Category
Environmental Sciences Ecology
Identifiers
urn:nbn:se:su:diva-170754 (URN)10.1016/j.scitotenv.2019.05.229 (DOI)000471657600059 ()31150881 (PubMedID)
Available from: 2019-07-24 Created: 2019-07-24 Last updated: 2022-03-23Bibliographically approved
Dakos, V., Matthews, B., Hendry, A. P., Levine, J., Loeuille, N., Norberg, J., . . . De Meester, L. (2019). Ecosystem tipping points in an evolving world. Nature Ecology & Evolution, 3(3), 355-362
Open this publication in new window or tab >>Ecosystem tipping points in an evolving world
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2019 (English)In: Nature Ecology & Evolution, E-ISSN 2397-334X, Vol. 3, no 3, p. 355-362Article, review/survey (Refereed) Published
Abstract [en]

There is growing concern over tipping points arising in ecosystems because of the crossing of environmental thresholds. Tipping points lead to abrupt and possibly irreversible shifts between alternative ecosystem states, potentially incurring high societal costs. Trait variation in populations is central to the biotic feedbacks that maintain alternative ecosystem states, as they govern the responses of populations to environmental change that could stabilize or destabilize ecosystem states. However, we know little about how evolutionary changes in trait distributions over time affect the occurrence of tipping points and even less about how big-scale ecological shifts reciprocally interact with trait dynamics. We argue that interactions between ecological and evolutionary processes should be taken into account in order to understand the balance of feedbacks governing tipping points in nature.

National Category
Biological Sciences
Identifiers
urn:nbn:se:su:diva-167644 (URN)10.1038/s41559-019-0797-2 (DOI)000459753700015 ()30778190 (PubMedID)
Available from: 2019-04-08 Created: 2019-04-08 Last updated: 2022-02-26Bibliographically approved
Baho, D. L., Leu, E., Pomati, F., Hessen, D. O., Norberg, J., Moe, S. J., . . . Nizzetto, L. (2019). Resilience of Natural Phytoplankton Communities to Pulse Disturbances from Micropollutant Exposure and Vertical Mixing. Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry, 38(10), 2197-2208
Open this publication in new window or tab >>Resilience of Natural Phytoplankton Communities to Pulse Disturbances from Micropollutant Exposure and Vertical Mixing
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2019 (English)In: Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry, ISSN 0730-7268, E-ISSN 1552-8618, Vol. 38, no 10, p. 2197-2208Article in journal (Refereed) Published
Abstract [en]

Freshwaters are increasingly exposed to complex mixtures of pharmaceutical and personal care products (PPCPs) from municipal wastewater, which are known to alter freshwater communities' structure and functioning. However, their interaction with other disturbances and whether their combined effects can impact ecological resilience (i.e., the ability of a system to tolerate disturbances without altering the system's original structure and processes) remain unexplored. Using in situ mesocosms in 2 lakes with different nutrient levels (mesotrophic and eutrophic), we assessed whether a pulse exposure to sublethal concentrations of 12 PPCPs affects the ecological resilience of natural phytoplankton communities that experienced an abrupt environmental change involving the destabilization of the water column through mixing. Such mixing events are predicted to increase as the effects of climate change unfold, leading to more frequent storms, which disrupt stratification in lakes and force communities to restructure. We assessed their combined effects on community metrics (biomass, species richness, and composition) and their relative resilience using 4 indicators (cross-scale, within-scale, aggregation length, and gap length), inferred from phytoplankton communities by discontinuity analysis. The mixing disturbance alone had negligible effects on the community metrics, but when combined with chemical contaminants significant changes were measured: reducing total biomass, species richness, and altered community composition of phytoplankton. Once these changes occurred, they persisted until the end of the experiment (day 20), when the communities' structures from the 2 highest exposure levels diverged from the controls. The resilience indicators were not affected by PPCPs but differed significantly between lakes, with lower resilience found in the eutrophic lake. Thus, PPCPs can significantly alter community structures and reinforce mechanisms that maintain ecosystems in a degraded state.

Keywords
Pharmaceuticals and personal care products, Climate change, Eutrophication, Phytoplankton, Ecological resilience
National Category
Biological Sciences
Identifiers
urn:nbn:se:su:diva-175075 (URN)10.1002/etc.4536 (DOI)000486765900001 ()31343756 (PubMedID)
Available from: 2019-10-23 Created: 2019-10-23 Last updated: 2022-03-23Bibliographically approved
Mazziotta, A., Granath, G., Rydin, H., Bengtsson, F. & Norberg, J. (2019). Scaling functional traits to ecosystem processes: Towards a mechanistic understanding in peat mosses. Journal of Ecology, 107(2), 843-859
Open this publication in new window or tab >>Scaling functional traits to ecosystem processes: Towards a mechanistic understanding in peat mosses
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2019 (English)In: Journal of Ecology, ISSN 0022-0477, E-ISSN 1365-2745, Vol. 107, no 2, p. 843-859Article in journal (Refereed) Published
Abstract [en]

The role of trait trade-offs and environmental filtering in explaining the variability in functional traits and ecosystem processes has received considerable attention for vascular plants but less so for bryophytes. Thus, we do not know whether the same forces also shape the phenotypic variability of bryophytes. Here, we assess how environmental gradients and trade-offs shape functional traits and subsequently ecosystem processes for peat mosses (Sphagnum), a globally important plant genus for carbon accumulation. We used piecewise Structural Equation Modeling (SEM) to understand how environmental gradients influence vital processes across levels of biological organization. We gathered data on functional traits for 15 globally important Sphagnum species covering a wide range of ecological preferences. Phenotypes lie along well-established axes of the plant economic spectrum characterizing trade-offs between vital physiological functions. Using SEM, we clarified the mechanisms of trait covariation and scaling to ecosystem processes. We tested whether peat mosses, like vascular plants, constrain trait variability between a fast turnover strategy based on resource acquisition via fast traits and processes, and a strategy of resource conservation, via slow traits and processes. We parameterized a process-based model estimating ecosystem processes linking environmental drivers with architectural and functional traits. In our SEM approach the amount of variance explained varied substantially (0.29 <= R-2 <= 0.82) among traits and processes in Sphagnum, and the model could predict some of them with high to intermediate accuracy for an independent dataset. R-2 variability was mainly explained by traits and species identity, and poorly by environmental filtering. Some Sphagnum species avoid the stress caused by periodic desiccation in hollows via resource acquisition based on fast photosynthesis and growth, while other species are adapted to grow high above the water-table on hummocks by slow physiological traits and processes to conserve resources. Synthesis.We contribute to a unified theory generating individual fitness, canopy dynamics and ecosystem processes from trait variation. As for vascular plants, the functional traits in the Sphagnum economic spectrum are linked into an integrated phenotypic network partly filtered by the environment and shaped by trade-offs in resource acquisition and conservation.

Keywords
bryophytes, ecosystem processes, peatlands, piecewise SEM, plant development and life-history traits, plant economic spectrum, Sphagnum, Structural Equation Modeling
National Category
Biological Sciences
Identifiers
urn:nbn:se:su:diva-166669 (URN)10.1111/1365-2745.13110 (DOI)000458616400029 ()
Available from: 2019-03-06 Created: 2019-03-06 Last updated: 2022-03-23Bibliographically approved
Lade, S. J., Donges, J. F., Fetzer, I., Anderies, J. M., Beer, C., Cornell, S. E., . . . Steffen, W. (2018). Analytically tractable climate-carbon cycle feedbacks under 21st century anthropogenic forcing. Earth System Dynamics, 9(2), 507-523
Open this publication in new window or tab >>Analytically tractable climate-carbon cycle feedbacks under 21st century anthropogenic forcing
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2018 (English)In: Earth System Dynamics, ISSN 2190-4979, E-ISSN 2190-4987, Vol. 9, no 2, p. 507-523Article in journal (Refereed) Published
Abstract [en]

Changes to climate-carbon cycle feedbacks may significantly affect the Earth system's response to greenhouse gas emissions. These feedbacks are usually analysed from numerical output of complex and arguably opaque Earth system models. Here, we construct a stylised global climate-carbon cycle model, test its output against comprehensive Earth system models, and investigate the strengths of its climate-carbon cycle feedbacks analytically. The analytical expressions we obtain aid understanding of carbon cycle feedbacks and the operation of the carbon cycle. Specific results include that different feedback formalisms measure fundamentally the same climate-carbon cycle processes; temperature dependence of the solubility pump, biological pump, and CO2 solubility all contribute approximately equally to the ocean climate-carbon feedback; and concentration-carbon feedbacks may be more sensitive to future climate change than climate-carbon feedbacks. Simple models such as that developed here also provide workbenches for simple but mechanistically based explorations of Earth system processes, such as interactions and feedbacks between the planetary boundaries, that are currently too uncertain to be included in comprehensive Earth system models.

National Category
Earth and Related Environmental Sciences
Identifiers
urn:nbn:se:su:diva-157743 (URN)10.5194/esd-9-507-2018 (DOI)000433128700001 ()
Available from: 2018-08-01 Created: 2018-08-01 Last updated: 2025-02-07Bibliographically approved
Organisations
Identifiers
ORCID iD: ORCID iD iconorcid.org/0000-0003-1861-5030

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