Source/Sink Patterns of Disturbance and Cross-Scale Mismatches in a Panarchy of Social-Ecological Landscapes

Land-use change is one of the major factors affecting global environmental change and represents a primary human effect on natural systems. Taking into account the scales and patterns of human land uses as source/sink disturbance systems, we describe a framework to characterize and interpret the spa...

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Main Authors: Nicola Zaccarelli, Irene Petrosillo, Giovanni Zurlini, Kurt Hans. Riitters
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Resilience Alliance 2008-06-01
Series:Ecology and Society
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol13/iss1/art26/
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author Nicola Zaccarelli
Irene Petrosillo
Giovanni Zurlini
Kurt Hans. Riitters
author_facet Nicola Zaccarelli
Irene Petrosillo
Giovanni Zurlini
Kurt Hans. Riitters
author_sort Nicola Zaccarelli
collection DOAJ
description Land-use change is one of the major factors affecting global environmental change and represents a primary human effect on natural systems. Taking into account the scales and patterns of human land uses as source/sink disturbance systems, we describe a framework to characterize and interpret the spatial patterns of disturbances along a continuum of scales in a panarchy of nested jurisdictional social-ecological landscapes (SELs) like region, provinces, and counties. We detect and quantify those scales through the patterns of disturbance relative to land use/land cover exhibited on satellite imagery over a 4-yr period in the Apulia region, South Italy. By using moving windows to measure composition (amount) and spatial configuration (contagion) of disturbance, we identify multiscale disturbance source/sink trajectories in the pattern metric space defined by composition and configuration of disturbance. We group disturbance trajectories along a continuum of scales for each location (pixel) according to broad land-use classes for each SEL level in the panarchy to identify spatial scales and geographical regions where disturbance is more or less concentrated in space indicating disturbance sources, sinks, and mismatches. We also group locations by clustering, and results are compared in the same pattern space and interpreted with respect to disturbance trajectories derived from random, multifractal and hierarchical neutral models. We show that in the real geographical world spatial mismatches of disturbances can occur at particular scale ranges because of cross scale disparities in land uses for the amount and contagion of disturbance, leading to more or less exacerbation of contrasting source/sink systems along certain scale domains. All cross-scale source/sink issues can produce both negative and positive effects on the scales above and below their levels, i.e., cross-scale effects. Through the framework outlined in our examples, managers, as well as stakeholders belonging to SELs in the panarchy, can be aware of specific scale ranges of disturbance where mismatches might occur and that will help them to value where and how to intervene in the panarchy of SELs to enhance the benefits and to minimize negative effects.
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spelling doaj.art-93e7a745242240bb915ac2385edc94d92022-12-21T19:12:10ZengResilience AllianceEcology and Society1708-30872008-06-011312610.5751/ES-02416-1301262416Source/Sink Patterns of Disturbance and Cross-Scale Mismatches in a Panarchy of Social-Ecological LandscapesNicola Zaccarelli0Irene Petrosillo1Giovanni Zurlini2Kurt Hans. Riitters3Landscape Ecology Laboratory, University of Salento, Lecce, ItalyLandscape Ecology Laboratory, University of Salento, Lecce, ItalyLandscape Ecology Laboratory, University of Salento, Lecce, ItalyU.S. Forest ServiceLand-use change is one of the major factors affecting global environmental change and represents a primary human effect on natural systems. Taking into account the scales and patterns of human land uses as source/sink disturbance systems, we describe a framework to characterize and interpret the spatial patterns of disturbances along a continuum of scales in a panarchy of nested jurisdictional social-ecological landscapes (SELs) like region, provinces, and counties. We detect and quantify those scales through the patterns of disturbance relative to land use/land cover exhibited on satellite imagery over a 4-yr period in the Apulia region, South Italy. By using moving windows to measure composition (amount) and spatial configuration (contagion) of disturbance, we identify multiscale disturbance source/sink trajectories in the pattern metric space defined by composition and configuration of disturbance. We group disturbance trajectories along a continuum of scales for each location (pixel) according to broad land-use classes for each SEL level in the panarchy to identify spatial scales and geographical regions where disturbance is more or less concentrated in space indicating disturbance sources, sinks, and mismatches. We also group locations by clustering, and results are compared in the same pattern space and interpreted with respect to disturbance trajectories derived from random, multifractal and hierarchical neutral models. We show that in the real geographical world spatial mismatches of disturbances can occur at particular scale ranges because of cross scale disparities in land uses for the amount and contagion of disturbance, leading to more or less exacerbation of contrasting source/sink systems along certain scale domains. All cross-scale source/sink issues can produce both negative and positive effects on the scales above and below their levels, i.e., cross-scale effects. Through the framework outlined in our examples, managers, as well as stakeholders belonging to SELs in the panarchy, can be aware of specific scale ranges of disturbance where mismatches might occur and that will help them to value where and how to intervene in the panarchy of SELs to enhance the benefits and to minimize negative effects.http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol13/iss1/art26/disturbance mismatchesdisturbance source/sinkmultiscale disturbance patternspanarchysocial-ecological landscapes.
spellingShingle Nicola Zaccarelli
Irene Petrosillo
Giovanni Zurlini
Kurt Hans. Riitters
Source/Sink Patterns of Disturbance and Cross-Scale Mismatches in a Panarchy of Social-Ecological Landscapes
Ecology and Society
disturbance mismatches
disturbance source/sink
multiscale disturbance patterns
panarchy
social-ecological landscapes.
title Source/Sink Patterns of Disturbance and Cross-Scale Mismatches in a Panarchy of Social-Ecological Landscapes
title_full Source/Sink Patterns of Disturbance and Cross-Scale Mismatches in a Panarchy of Social-Ecological Landscapes
title_fullStr Source/Sink Patterns of Disturbance and Cross-Scale Mismatches in a Panarchy of Social-Ecological Landscapes
title_full_unstemmed Source/Sink Patterns of Disturbance and Cross-Scale Mismatches in a Panarchy of Social-Ecological Landscapes
title_short Source/Sink Patterns of Disturbance and Cross-Scale Mismatches in a Panarchy of Social-Ecological Landscapes
title_sort source sink patterns of disturbance and cross scale mismatches in a panarchy of social ecological landscapes
topic disturbance mismatches
disturbance source/sink
multiscale disturbance patterns
panarchy
social-ecological landscapes.
url http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol13/iss1/art26/
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