Publication | Open Access
Interpreting Resilience through Long-Term Ecology: Potential Insights in Western Mediterranean Landscapes~!2010-01-13~!2010-01-22~!2010-04-07~!
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2010
Year
Many studies on ecosystem resilience often lack sufficiently long time scales to determine potential cycles of landscape response. In this paper we review some examples on how palaeoecology has provided an important aid to modern ecology in understanding ecosystem resilience. We focus some of these ideas on two Holocene sites from Southern Spain (Zoar and Gdor) where current plant diversity is very high. Both sites presented resilient pattern at centennial and millennial time scales with several stable phases. Vegetation in Zoar proved to be very sensitive to environmental changes, especially moisture availability while forest in Gdor responded elastically to fire and drought to a threshold level when the forest recede to a more open landscape. We conclude that any serious attempt to understand ecosystem resilience should include the long-term perspective.
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