2019
DOI: 10.3390/su11051458
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Shifting Gears for the Use of the Shifting Baseline Syndrome in Ecological Restoration

Abstract: There are two barriers to accomplishing restoration of ecosystems: insufficient information about historical baselines to guide restoration, and shifts between the actual baselines and perceptions about historical conditions. These two conditions generate a phenomenon called shifting baseline syndrome (SBS). Our study systematically reviewed and quantitatively analyzed the SBS studies. There is an increase and subsequent stabilization in the number of publications, 32% of scientific articles added new informat… Show more

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Cited by 13 publications
(10 citation statements)
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“…Evidence of the presence and impacts of SBS within a large public sample highlights the potential magnitude of SBS as a widespread concern, holding the power to impact conservation understanding, uptake and support on a global scale (Bonebrake et al., 2010; Guerrero‐Gatica et al., 2019; Humphries & Winemiller, 2009). In terms of conservation management, our study emphasizes the potential impacts of SBS on the strength of conclusions for conservation decision‐making, especially when informed by anecdotal perceptions of long‐term biological change (Anadón, GimÉnez, Ballestar, & Pérez, 2009; McClenachan, 2009; Thurstan et al., 2016).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Evidence of the presence and impacts of SBS within a large public sample highlights the potential magnitude of SBS as a widespread concern, holding the power to impact conservation understanding, uptake and support on a global scale (Bonebrake et al., 2010; Guerrero‐Gatica et al., 2019; Humphries & Winemiller, 2009). In terms of conservation management, our study emphasizes the potential impacts of SBS on the strength of conclusions for conservation decision‐making, especially when informed by anecdotal perceptions of long‐term biological change (Anadón, GimÉnez, Ballestar, & Pérez, 2009; McClenachan, 2009; Thurstan et al., 2016).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This requirement necessitates the use of paired data techniques which can statistically compare the level of agreement between biological and social datasets at similar spatial and temporal scales (Gilchrist & Mallory, 2007;Huntington et al, 2004). A significant barrier to diagnosing SBS using this method is a lack of reliable ecological evidence of historical conditions or consistent long-term empirical data documenting change over multiple generations for many biological systems (Bonebrake, Christensen, Boggs, & Ehrlich, 2010;Campbell, Gray, Hazen, & Shackeroff, 2009;Guerrero-Gatica et al, 2019;Pinnegar & Engelhard, 2008). A recent meta-analysis by Guerrero-Gatica et al (2019) noted that while many studies suggest the existence of SBS, many do not provide adequate empirical evidence of SBS to be conclusive, often because this was not the primary objective of the study (e.g.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The longstanding ecological restoration framework remains a powerful and appealing tool for evaluating conditions and setting management directions; however, research has recommended greater focus on social indicators and consideration of local community perceptions when evaluating baselines for ecological restoration [77]. Furthermore, ecological restoration has the potential to contribute to injustices if strategies do not account for social impacts.…”
Section: The Ecological Restoration Framework Can Be Broadened To Incmentioning
confidence: 99%