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Acknowledging long-term ecological change: the problem of shifting baselines

Version 2 2024-06-06, 11:59
Version 1 2016-10-31, 15:50
chapter
posted on 2024-06-06, 11:59 authored by ES Klein, RH Thurstan
Shifting baselines describes the phenomenon where long-term changes to an environment go unrecognized because what is perceived as natural shifts with succeeding generations of scientists and other observers. This is a particular problem for the oceans because we are rarely able to directly observe the consequences of human activities. In the absence of data to track these consequences, a common assumption has been that the communities we observe today using SCUBA or other technology, are similar to the communities that existed 10, 100, or even 1000 years ago. Research is increasingly demonstrating this is not the case. Instead, marine ecosystems may have been vastly different in the past, and we have succumbed to the shifting baselines syndrome. This has significant implications for scientific study, management, and for human communities more broadly. We discuss these implications, and how we might address the shifting baseline syndrome in the oceans to confront its repercussions. In a world where environmental degradation is accelerating, doing so is critical to avoid further ratcheting down of our expectations of ecosystem health and productivity, and to ensure that we have the information necessary to implement appropriate recovery and management goals.

History

Chapter number

2

Pagination

11-29

ISBN-13

9789401774963

Language

eng

Publication classification

B Book chapter, B1 Book chapter

Copyright notice

2016, Springer Science+Business Media

Extent

11

Editor/Contributor(s)

Schwerdtner Máñez K, Poulsen B

Publisher

Springer

Place of publication

Dordrecht, Switzerland

Title of book

Perspectives on oceans past : a handbook of marine environmental history