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Featured researches published by Peter Bridgewater.


Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment | 2014

Managing the whole landscape: historical, hybrid, and novel ecosystems

Richard J. Hobbs; Eric Higgs; Carol M. Hall; Peter Bridgewater; F. Stuart Chapin; Erle C. Ellis; John J. Ewel; Lauren M. Hallett; Jim Harris; Kristen B Hulvey; Stephen T. Jackson; Patricia L. Kennedy; Christoph Kueffer; Lori Lach; Trevor C. Lantz; Ariel E. Lugo; Joseph Mascaro; Stephen D. Murphy; Cara R. Nelson; Michael P. Perring; Timothy R. Seastedt; Rachel J. Standish; Katherine N. Suding; Pedro M. Tognetti; Laith Yakob; Laurie Yung

The reality confronting ecosystem managers today is one of heterogeneous, rapidly transforming landscapes, particularly in the areas more affected by urban and agricultural development. A landscape management framework that incorporates all systems, across the spectrum of degrees of alteration, provides a fuller set of options for how and when to intervene, uses limited resources more effectively, and increases the chances of achieving management goals. That many ecosystems have departed so substantially from their historical trajectory that they defy conventional restoration is not in dispute. Acknowledging novel ecosystems need not constitute a threat to existing policy and management approaches. Rather, the development of an integrated approach to management interventions can provide options that are in tune with the current reality of rapid ecosystem change.


Biodiversity and Conservation | 2016

The Intergovernmental Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services (IPBES): progress and next steps

Dirk S. Schmeller; Peter Bridgewater

Biodiversity and the services ecosystems provide have built the foundation of human civilization and provide for the welfare of people. With the increase of the human population it has become clearer than ever that the human exploitation of our natural resources leads to detrimental interactions between ecological and sociological systems. Only concerted and global actions will be able to reverse ongoing biodiversity loss. In response to these needs, the United Nations agreed the establishment of the Intergovernmental Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services (IPBES) in 2010. Here, we report on the progress IPBES has made since its inception, and suggest how the scientific community can engage with this important science-policy interface.


Biodiversity and Conservation | 2017

The Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services (IPBES): getting involved

Dirk S. Schmeller; Jari Niemelä; Peter Bridgewater

The Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform for Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services (IPBES) held its 5th plenary session in Bonn during March 2017. After last year’s pollinator assessment, the biodiversity assessments currently being undertaken are shortly to be available for peer review. The scientific community can play an important role in both conducting assessments and in the peer-review process. Independent scientists can contribute to ensure that these assessments are comprehensive with respect to the current state and future trends of biodiversity and the ecosystem services. We outline possibilities for deeper involvement of the scientific community in the IPBES process and draw attention to upcoming reviews in 2017.


Ecological Research | 2011

Phenotypic responses of Spartina anglica to duration of tidal immersion

Hongli Li; Guangchun Lei; Yingbiao Zhi; Peter Bridgewater; Lei Zhao; Yu Wang; Zifa Deng; Yuhong Liu; Fude Liu; Shuqing An

Although Spartina anglica C.E. Hubbard continues to be invasive in many countries, this species has experienced a drastic decline in coastal China over the last decade. We hypothesize that changes in the duration of tidal immersion were responsible for this decline because the elevation of the S. anglica-dominated area in coastal China has increased greatly over the last decade. We examined the effects of the duration of simulated tidal immersion and plant material provenance on growth, asexual reproduction, biomass accumulation, and allocation (percent of above-ground biomass to total biomass) of S. anglica in a greenhouse experiment. The provenance of S. anglica did not significantly affect any traits measured except for height, stalk diameter, and leaf area. However, all traits were affected by the duration of immersion. Plants grown under 6xa0h of immersion were taller and had more leaves, more roots, and larger leaf area than those under 2, 4, 8, and 10xa0h of immersion. Asexual traits and biomass of the plants grown under 6xa0h of immersion were significantly larger than those under other immersion durations. The results suggested that S. anglica benefits from tidal immersion and decreasing duration of tidal immersion may have resulted in the decline of the S. anglica populations in coastal China. Thus, controlling the duration of tidal immersion may be an effective way of controlling invasiveness of this species elsewhere in the world.


Biodiversity and Conservation | 2016

The Anthropocene biosphere: do threatened species, Red Lists, and protected areas have a future role in nature conservation?

Peter Bridgewater

Threatened species, red listing and an increase in protected areas have been, and currently remain, key foci for nature conservation. Yet as it becomes more evident we are living in the Anthropocene biosphere the relevance and value of those activities declines. The “new conservation”, controversially argued for by some since 2011, has different foci and strategies, yet they are perhaps too anthropic. A nature conservation for the Anthropocene biosphere must be built on an understanding of biocultural diversity, take account of the conservation potential of novel ecosystems, de-emphasise the role of protected areas while examining the role of novel ex situ approaches to biodiversity conservation and review effort and expenditure on Red Listing of threatened species as conservation actions. The 2016 IUCN World Conservation Congress offers potential to provide global leadership towards a new nature conservation for the Anthropocene biosphere.


Natural Resources Forum | 2015

Implementing SDG 15: Can large-scale public programs help deliver biodiversity conservation, restoration and management, while assisting human development?

Peter Bridgewater; Mathieu Régnier; Roberto Cruz García

Among the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), the proposed SDG 15 promotes activities that, inter alia, “Protect, restore and promote sustainable use of terrestrial ecosystems”. An important potential contribution in achieving SDG 15 is through public programmes designed to jointly promote human development through poverty alleviation and improvement of human livelihoods and biodiversity conservation/management/restoration. An analysis of twenty public programmes with such joint objectives yielded twelve lessons learned. In addition to financial commitments, government and intergovernmental agency input for such public programmes includes ensuring political will and appropriate legal frameworks. Local communities and civil society provide input through traditional and indigenous ecological knowledge and stewardship. Appropriate shared inputs in development and the implementation of such public programmes, with communication between local community, broader civil society, the scientific community and governments will result in: better use and management of biodiversity; alleviation of poverty; security of livelihoods and better governance systems. The Ecosystem Approach of the Convention on Biological Diversity provides an ideal framework when planning and implementing new programmes. Application of the lessons learned to new public programmes will ensure that the answer to the question posed in the title is an emphatic “Yes”, and assist with the achievement of SDG 15.


SpringerPlus | 2012

Zoning for management in wetland nature reserves: a case study using Wuliangsuhai Nature Reserve, China

Qing Zeng; Yamian Zhang; Yifei Jia; Shengwu Jiao; Duoduo Feng; Peter Bridgewater; Guangchun Lei

BackgroundZoning is a fundamental tool for the effective management of nature reserves. A three-zone model (core zone, buffer zone, and experimental zone) has been applied to nature reserves in China since 1980s; however, this model appears not fit for all types of nature reserves, especially wetlands.Case descriptionWuliangsuhai is such a typical wetland reserve, which can represent most of the other wetland reserves in China, for both its human utilization, and for its function as the bird habitat. The “Component-Process-Service” (CPS) framework of the Convention on Wetlands allows a determination of the “ecological character” of the wetland and also allows identification of potential threats, providing thus a perspective for management opportunities and challenges.Discussion and evaluationApplying the CPS framework to Wuliangsuhai wetland nature reserve, we have had a better understanding of the ecosystem services and its relationship with the ecological process and components of the wetland. A comparison of effectiveness in maintaining ecosystem services by the two zoning models (the existing three-zone model, and the new zoning model) was made.ConclusionsThe study suggested introducing an additional risk-control zone to be more effective in managing and alleviating threats to the ecological character than the standard 3-zone system. Furthermore, a “dynamic” zoning that takes into account the annual variation in habitat and avifauna distribution, as an elaboration of the Four-zone structure, may achieve the desired conservation objectives in an even more effective manner. The proposed zonation structure has the added benefit of promoting harmonization between nature conservation and local sustainable development.


Biodiversity and Conservation | 2018

IPBES-6: the best plenary yet?

Peter Bridgewater; Dirk S. Schmeller

The Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform for Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services (IPBES) held its 6th plenary session in Medellin (Colombia) during March 2018. Several assessments were due for acceptance by the plenary. We here give news from the plenary and the platform, sketch out important key messages from the regional assessments as well as of the global thematic assessment on land degradation and restoration. We further give an outlook on the work ahead and potential for contributions from the scientific community to the important work of IPBES.


Marine and Freshwater Research | 2017

Seasonal and diurnal methane and carbon dioxide emissions from the littoral area of the Miyun Reservoir in Beijing, China

Gang Li; Hong-Li Li; Meng Yang; Ting Lei; Ming-Xiang Zhang; Peter Bridgewater; Shuhong Wu; Guangchun Lei

Reservoirs have been regarded as hot spots for greenhouse gas emissions since the 1990s. However, there is scant research about littoral zones of reservoirs. In the present study, static closed chamber and gas chromatograph techniques were used to measure methane (CH4) and carbon dioxide (CO2) flux in the littoral area of a temperate reservoir from 2009 to 2010. The littoral area comprises three zones, namely supralittoral, eulittoral and infralittoral. The patterns of CH4 and CO2 emissions from these three littoral zones were significantly different during the sampling periods, with the eulittoral zone having the highest CH4 flux and the supralittoral zone having the highest CO2 flux. Temperature and biomass correlated with CH4 and CO2 emissions. Measurement of CO2 emissions after removing vegetation varied in each zone and according to time of sampling. A large littoral area of the reservoir sampled herein will be submerged and converted to a pelagic area with deep standing water after the South to North Water Transfer Project is completed, in 2050. The results of the present study suggest further research and monitoring are needed, and should focus on likely effects of extreme climate events and the effects of human-mediated factors on greenhouse gas emissions.


Current Opinion in Environmental Sustainability | 2016

Socio-Environmental Systems (SES) Research : What have we learned and how can we use this information in future research programs

Barry Turner; Karen J. Esler; Peter Bridgewater; Joshua Tewksbury; J. Nadia Sitas; Brent Abrahams; F. Stuart Chapin; Rinku Roy Chowdhury; Patrick Christie; Sandra Díaz; Penny Firth; Corrine N. Knapp; Jonathan G. Kramer; Rik Leemans; Margaret A. Palmer; Diana Pietri; Jeremy Pittman; José Sarukhán; Ross T. Shackleton; Reinmar Seidler; Brian W. van Wilgen; Harold A. Mooney

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Guangchun Lei

Beijing Forestry University

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Cai Lu

Beijing Forestry University

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Hong-Li Li

Beijing Forestry University

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Meng Yang

Beijing Forestry University

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Ming-Xiang Zhang

Beijing Forestry University

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Qing Zeng

Beijing Forestry University

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Ting Lei

Beijing Forestry University

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F. Stuart Chapin

University of Alaska Fairbanks

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