Social-Ecological Guilds: Putting People into Marine Historical Ecology
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Date
2011
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Abstract
"Marine historical ecology provides historic insights into past ocean ecosystems that are
crucial to effectively confronting the declining health and resilience in marine ecosystems. A more 'peopled'
approach to marine historical ecology is necessary, given the heightened emphasis on human dimensions
in marine management. This study examined the historical ecology of Hawaiian coral reef ecosystems
through oral histories of diverse ocean experts, representing six traditional, local, and scientific knowledge
systems. Based on 61 in-depth interviews with these ocean experts, historical trends, abundance, and
distribution over 80 years and a 50-mile region for 271 species emerged. Analyzing trends by ecological
guild, e.g., herbivores, proved inappropriate to these data; rather, based on qualitative analyses, five distinct
trends encompassing nearly all species emerged in what we term "social-ecological guilds." Ocean experts
observations of change were surprisingly consistent, regardless of their knowledge system, whereas
perceptions of change varied widely. The historical picture was far broader and richer when the contributions
of six knowledge systems were incorporated, compared to that of any one alone. Social-ecological guilds
also matter critically from a management perspective, because understanding how experts from a
multiplicity of perspectives observe, interpret, and respond to ecological change can help managers
anticipate responses to management activities and perhaps to design better management strategies."
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Keywords
coral reefs, local knowledge, marine ecology, conservation, social-ecological systems, traditional knowledge