Fenner School of Environment and Society, Australian National University, Canberra ACT 0200, Australia.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2011 Sep 20;108(38):15887-91. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1110245108. Epub 2011 Aug 29.
We describe the "landscape trap" concept, whereby entire landscapes are shifted into, and then maintained (trapped) in, a highly compromised structural and functional state as the result of multiple temporal and spatial feedbacks between human and natural disturbance regimes. The landscape trap concept builds on ideas like stable alternative states and other relevant concepts, but it substantively expands the conceptual thinking in a number of unique ways. In this paper, we (i) review the literature to develop the concept of landscape traps, including their general features; (ii) provide a case study as an example of a landscape trap from the mountain ash (Eucalyptus regnans) forests of southeastern Australia; (iii) suggest how landscape traps can be detected before they are irrevocably established; and (iv) present evidence of the generality of landscape traps in different ecosystems worldwide.
我们描述了“景观陷阱”概念,即由于人类和自然干扰制度之间的多重时空反馈,整个景观被转移到高度受损的结构和功能状态,并被维持(困在)其中。景观陷阱概念建立在稳定的替代状态等相关概念的基础上,但它以许多独特的方式实质性地扩展了概念思维。在本文中,我们:(i) 回顾文献以发展景观陷阱的概念,包括其一般特征;(ii) 提供一个案例研究作为澳大利亚东南部山灰(桉树属)森林中景观陷阱的例子;(iii) 提出如何在景观陷阱不可逆转地建立之前检测到它们;(iv) 提出了景观陷阱在世界不同生态系统中的普遍性的证据。