2018
DOI: 10.3390/su10103554
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The Moku System: Managing Biocultural Resources for Abundance within Social-Ecological Regions in Hawaiʻi

Abstract: Through research, restoration of agro-ecological sites, and a renaissance of cultural awareness in Hawaiʻi, there has been a growing recognition of the ingenuity of the Hawaiian biocultural resource management system. The contemporary term for this system, “the ahupuaʻa system”, does not accurately convey the nuances of system function, and it inhibits an understanding about the complexity of the system’s management. We examined six aspects of the Hawaiian biocultural resource management system to understand i… Show more

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Cited by 49 publications
(68 citation statements)
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“…Among the richest set of ridge-to-reef, social-ecological system approaches to natural resources management is found in Oceania [8,65]. Examples include the tambak in Indonesia [66], the puava in the Solomon Islands, the tabinau in Yap, the vanua in Fiji [67] and the moku in Hawai'i [27]. Through this research, we show that place-based solutions that integrate land and sea processes are critical for addressing local environmental threats.…”
Section: Application and Transferabilitymentioning
confidence: 95%
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“…Among the richest set of ridge-to-reef, social-ecological system approaches to natural resources management is found in Oceania [8,65]. Examples include the tambak in Indonesia [66], the puava in the Solomon Islands, the tabinau in Yap, the vanua in Fiji [67] and the moku in Hawai'i [27]. Through this research, we show that place-based solutions that integrate land and sea processes are critical for addressing local environmental threats.…”
Section: Application and Transferabilitymentioning
confidence: 95%
“…After nearly two centuries of decline of the Hawaiian biocultural resource management system, there has been a resurgence of interest-from within academia and the policy realm, as well as at the community level-in reviving that system to restore biocultural resource abundance [27]. This renaissance has inspired an attempt to align traditional Hawaiian biocultural resource management with contemporary frameworks of ecosystem-based management that re-establish the cohesive links between terrestrial and marine systems, encompassing integrated ecological and social processes from ridge-to-reef [28][29][30].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…In the pre-contact era-prior to contact with Europeans in 1778-the social-ecological system in Hawai'i was intensively managed to maximize resource abundance by attaining a stable state known in Hawaiian as "'āina momona". 'Āina momona is descriptive of a stable state that can exist in alternative forms in Hawai'i, and is associated with both flooded-field and rain-fed agriculture [25]. This is a stable state that was brought about via a regime shift (originally from an ecosystem into a social-ecological system that maximized ecosystem services).…”
Section: The Hawaiian Social-ecological Systemmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Some SES models add people as beneficiaries of positive ecosystem goods and services to represent reciprocity (e.g., Kittinger et al, 2012; Figure 3A), however, this relationship only represents one dimension of reciprocity. Similar to other studies (e.g., Rissman and Gillon, 2017;Vaughan et al, 2017;Winter et al, 2018), participants in our research instead described a system where people could be both environmental stressors and stewards, and experience both benefits and risks from the ecosystems (Figure 3B). Examples of ecosystem risks in West Hawai'i include king tides, storm surges, vog (air pollution from volcanic gasses), and lava flows.…”
Section: Reciprocal and Holistic Social-ecological Systems Modelsmentioning
confidence: 70%