Publisher DOI: 10.1007/s10584-019-02544-0
Title: Linking scales and disciplines: an interdisciplinary cross-scale approach to supporting climate-relevant ecosystem management
Language: English
Authors: Berger, Christian 
Bieri, Mari 
Bradshaw, Karen 
Brümmer, Christian 
Clemen, Thomas  
Hickler, Thomas 
Kutsch, Werner Leo 
Lenfers, Ulfia A.  
Martens, Carola 
Midgley, Guy F. 
Mukwashi, Kanisios 
Odipo, Victor 
Scheiter, Simon 
Schmullius, Christiane 
Baade, Jussi 
du Toit, Justin C. O. 
Scholes, Robert J. 
Smit, Izak P. J. 
Stevens, Nicola 
Twine, Wayne 
Issue Date: 5-Sep-2019
Publisher: Springer
Journal or Series Name: Climatic Change 
Volume: 156
Issue: 1-2
Startpage: 139
Endpage: 150
Abstract: 
Southern Africa is particularly sensitive to climate change, due to both ecological and socio-economic factors, with rural land users among the most vulnerable groups. The provision of information to support climate-relevant decision-making requires an understanding of the projected impacts of change and complex feedbacks within the local ecosystems, as well as local demands on ecosystem services. In this paper, we address the limitation of current approaches for developing management relevant socio-ecological information on the projected impacts of climate change and human activities. We emphasise the need for linking disciplines and approaches by expounding the methodology followed in our two consecutive projects. These projects combine disciplines and levels of measurements from the leaf level (ecophysiology) to the local landscape level (flux measurements) and from the local household level (socio-economic surveys) to the regional level (remote sensing), feeding into a variety of models at multiple scales. Interdisciplinary, multi-scaled, and integrated socio-ecological approaches, as proposed here, are needed to compliment reductionist and linear, scale-specific approaches. Decision support systems are used to integrate and communicate the data and models to the local decision-makers.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12738/4922
ISSN: 1573-1480
Review status: This version was peer reviewed (peer review)
Institute: Department Informatik 
Fakultät Technik und Informatik 
Type: Article
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