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Resistance, recovery, and resilience: rethinking the three Rs of survival in the Anthropocene
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  • Benjamin W. Abbott,
  • Kristen L Underwood,
  • Erin Cedar Seybold,
  • Dustin Kincaid,
  • Scott D Hamshaw,
  • Raymond M Lee,
  • Donna M Rizzo,
  • Brian Brown,
  • Regina Toolin,
  • Jon Chorover,
  • Li Li,
  • Gabriel Lewis,
  • Sayedeh Sara Sayedi,
  • Samuel St. Clair,
  • Rachel L. Buck,
  • Zachary Aanderud,
  • Janice L Brahney,
  • Ryan S. Nixon,
  • Weihong Wang,
  • Cally Flox,
  • Julia N Perdrial
Benjamin W. Abbott
Brigham Young University

Corresponding Author:[email protected]

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Kristen L Underwood
University of Vermont
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Erin Cedar Seybold
Kansas Geological Survey, University of Kansas
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Dustin Kincaid
University of Vermont
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Scott D Hamshaw
University of Vermont
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Raymond M Lee
Brigham Young Univeristy
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Donna M Rizzo
University of Vermont
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Brian Brown
Brigham Young University
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Regina Toolin
University of Vermont
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Jon Chorover
University of Arizona
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Li Li
Pennsylvania State University
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Gabriel Lewis
University of Nevada, Reno
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Sayedeh Sara Sayedi
Brigham Young University
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Samuel St. Clair
Brigham Young University, Department of Plant and Wildlife Sciences
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Rachel L. Buck
B10Brigham Young University, Department of Biology
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Zachary Aanderud
Unknown
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Janice L Brahney
Utah State University
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Ryan S. Nixon
Brigham Young University, Department of Teacher Education
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Weihong Wang
Utah Valley University, Department of Earth Science
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Cally Flox
Brigham Young University, McKay School of Education, CITES Department
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Julia N Perdrial
University of Vermont
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Abstract

The concepts of resistance, recovery, and resilience are in diverse fields from behavioral psychology to planetary ecology. These “three Rs” describe some of the most important properties allowing complex systems to survive in dynamic environments. However, in many fields—including ecology—our ability to predict resistance, recovery and resilience remains limited. Here, we propose new disturbance terminology and describe a unifying definition of resistance, recovery, and resilience. We distinguish functional disturbances that affect short-term ecosystem processes from structural disturbances that alter the state factors of ecosystem development. We define resilience as the combination of resistance and recovery—i.e., the ability of a system to maintain its state by withstanding disturbance or rapidly recovering from it. In the Anthropocene, humans have become dominant drivers of many ecosystem processes and nearly all the state factors influencing ecosystem development. Consequently, the resilience of an individual ecological parameter is not an inherent attribute but a function of linkages with other biological, chemical, physical, and especially social parameters. Because every ecosystem experiences multiple, overlapping disturbances, a multidimensional resilience approach is needed that considers both ecosystem structure (configuration of linkages) and disturbance regime. We explore these concepts with a few case studies and recommend analytical tools and community-based approaches to strengthen ecosystem resilience. Disregarding cultural and social dimensions of disturbance regimes and ecosystem structures leads to undesirable outcomes, particularly in our current context of intensifying socioecological crises. Consequently, cultivating reciprocal relationships with natural disturbance regimes and ecosystem structures is crucial to Earth stewardship in the Anthropocene.
10 Jan 2023Submitted to ESS Open Archive
16 Jan 2023Published in ESS Open Archive