Department of Fisheries and Wildlife, Center for Systems Integration & Sustainability, Michigan State University, 115 Manly Miles Building, 1405 S. Harrison Rd., East Lansing, MI, 48823, USA.
International Arctic Research Center, University of Alaska Fairbanks, 2160 Koyukuk Drive, PO Box 757340, Fairbanks, AK, 99775-7340, USA.
Ambio. 2023 Jun;52(6):1040-1055. doi: 10.1007/s13280-023-01835-2. Epub 2023 Mar 28.
Numerous narrow marine passages around the world serve as essential gateways for the transportation of goods, the movement of people, and the migration of fish and wildlife. These global gateways facilitate human-nature interactions across distant regions. The socioeconomic and environmental interactions among distant coupled human and natural systems affect the sustainability of global gateways in complex ways. However, the assessment and analysis of global gateways are scattered and fragmented. To fill this knowledge gap, we frame global gateways as telecoupled human and natural systems using an emerging global gateway, the Bering Strait, as a demonstration. We examine how three telecoupling processes (tourism, vessel traffic, and natural resource development) impact and are impacted by the coupled human and natural system of the Bering Strait Region. Given that global gateways share many similarities, our analysis of the Bering Strait Region provides a foundation for the assessment of other telecoupled global gateways.
世界上有许多狭窄的海上通道,它们是货物运输、人员流动以及鱼类和野生动物迁徙的重要门户。这些全球门户促进了遥远地区的人与自然的互动。遥远的耦合人类和自然系统之间的社会经济和环境相互作用以复杂的方式影响着全球门户的可持续性。然而,对全球门户的评估和分析却分散而零碎。为了填补这一知识空白,我们将全球门户构建为使用新兴的全球门户——白令海峡——作为示范的遥耦合人类和自然系统。我们研究了旅游、船只交通和自然资源开发这三种遥耦合过程如何影响和受到白令海峡地区耦合人类和自然系统的影响。鉴于全球门户有许多共同之处,我们对白令海峡地区的分析为评估其他遥耦合的全球门户提供了基础。