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Advisor(s)
Abstract(s)
Resilience has been used over a wide range of scientific fields and often ambiguously, causing
confusion over terminology and concepts and giving rise to distinct interpretations and
misconceptions, even within the same scientific discipline. Starting by providing clarifications and
definitions of the main terminology and key principles of ecological resilience theory, we pass on to
expressing them through geomorphic dimensions of barrier islands. Three distinct environments
(beach, dune, marsh) are proposed as the panarchical levels of analysis, along with potential
feedbacks between them and geomorphic dimensions that can express the changes of the stability
landscape. Morphological changes induced by storms and subsequent recovery are transferred to
stability landscapes, over a range of storm impacts and recovery. We postulate that postperturbation recovery should not be restricted to regaining pre-disturbance barrier dimensions, but
should be viewed in terms of reorganisation and adaptation, accounting for maintaining the
existence of functions, or the ability of the system to regain them. The proposed scheme and
dimensions are tested using geomorphological data from barrier response to distinct disturbances,
over different temporal scales that range from event to multi-decadal ones. The case of a barrier
island migrating landwards is conceptualised in terms of alternative states and thresholds arising
during the process and related phases and changes to the adaptive cycle. The methodology and
approach presented is a step towards more holistic views of geomorphic systems’ resilience that we
hope will contribute to furthering interdisciplinary understanding and cooperation in the area of
sustainability and resilience of natural systems.
Description
Keywords
Ecological resilience Barrier islands Thresholds Panarchical levels Barrier rollover
Citation
Publisher
Elsevier