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Copyright AOSIS (Pty) Ltd 2015

Abstract

For a number of years, the extensive ecosystems of southern Africa have been a testing ground for ideas and techniques useful for studying and managing large-scale complex systems everywhere, and in particular for tackling issues of global change. The first contribution has been through making consistent, long-term, large-scale observations on climate, vegetation and animal dynamics and disturbances. These have been crucial in developing and testing hypotheses regarding how the earth system works at large space and timescales. The second contribution has been experimental, developing the notion that ecosystems can be the subject of deliberate experimental manipulation. Sometimes this has taken the form of large-scale treatments, such as fire trials or herbivore exclusion plots. More frequently, it has made use of the 'experiment' of the protected area in contrast to its surrounds, or has exploited the information in natural or human-induced gradients. Ecosystem experimentation has required rethinking the fundamentals of experimental design: The fourth contribution concerns the management of large-scale complex systems in the face of limited knowledge.

Details

Title
Big-picture ecology for a small planet
Author
Scholes, Robert J
Pages
1-4
Section
Commentary
Publication year
2015
Publication date
2015
Publisher
AOSIS (Pty) Ltd
ISSN
00756458
e-ISSN
20710771
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
1737493464
Copyright
Copyright AOSIS (Pty) Ltd 2015