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  2. Ecological resilience - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ecological_resilience

    In ecology, resilience is the capacity of an ecosystem to respond to a perturbation or disturbance by resisting damage and subsequently recovering. Such perturbations and disturbances can include stochastic events such as fires, flooding, windstorms, insect population explosions, and human activities such as deforestation, fracking of the ground for oil extraction, pesticide sprayed in soil ...

  3. Ecosystem management - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ecosystem_management

    Ecological integrity: Management is focused on maintaining or reintroducing native biological diversity and on preserving natural disturbance regimes and other key processes that sustain resilience. Data collection: Broad ecological research and data collection is needed to inform effective management (e.g., species diversity, habitat types ...

  4. Alternative stable state - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alternative_stable_state

    The resistance to state shifts is known as "resilience" (Holling 1973). State shifts are often illustrated heuristically by the ball-in-cup model (Holling, C.S. et al., 1995) Biodiversity in the functioning of ecosystems: an ecological synthesis.

  5. Ecosystem collapse - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ecosystem_collapse

    Emerging signals of declining forest resilience under climate change. [28] Scientists can predict tipping points for ecosystem collapse. The most frequently used model for predicting food web collapse is called R50, which is a reliable measurement model for food web robustness. [29]

  6. Species distribution modelling - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Species_Distribution_Modelling

    Species distribution modelling (SDM), also known as environmental (or ecological) niche modelling (ENM), habitat modelling, predictive habitat distribution modelling, and range mapping [1] uses ecological models to predict the distribution of a species across geographic space and time using environmental data. The environmental data are most ...

  7. Ecological stability - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ecological_stability

    An example of ecological stability . In ecology, an ecosystem is said to possess ecological stability (or equilibrium) if it is capable of returning to its equilibrium state after a perturbation (a capacity known as resilience) or does not experience unexpected large changes in its characteristics across time. [1]

  8. IUCN Red List of Ecosystems - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IUCN_Red_List_of_Ecosystems

    The basis of the IUCN Red List of Ecosystems are the IUCN Red List of Ecosystems Categories and Criteria, a set of eight categories and five criteria that provide a consistent method for assessing an ecosystem's risk of collapse. They are designed to be: broadly applicable across type ecosystems and geographic areas, transparent and ...

  9. Resilience (engineering and construction) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Resilience_(engineering...

    Social-ecological resilience, also known as adaptive resilience, [19] is a new concept that shifts the focus to combining the social, ecological and technical domains of resilience. The adaptive model focuses on the transformable quality of the stable state of a system.