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Exploring the interface between planetary boundaries and palaeoecology

Exploring the interface between planetary boundaries and palaeoecology
Exploring the interface between planetary boundaries and palaeoecology
The concepts of planetary boundaries are influential in the sustainability literature and assist in delineating the ‘safe operating spaces’ beyond which critical Earth system processes could collapse. Moving away from our current trajectory towards ‘hothouse Earth’ will require knowledge of how Earth systems have varied throughout the Holocene, and whether and how far we have deviated from past ranges of variability. Such information can inform decisions about where change could be resisted, accepted or where adaptation is inevitable. The need for information on long-term (Holocene) change provides an interface for palaeoecology and sustainability that remains underexploited. In this position paper, we explore this interface, first discussing the need for long-term perspectives and introducing examples where palaeoecology has been used in defining safe operating spaces and constraining limits of acceptable change. We describe advances in quantitative methods for analysis of time-series data that strengthen the contribution of palaeoecology to the concepts of planetary boundaries and safe operating spaces. We consider the importance of issues of scaling from landscape to regional and global scales in operationalising planetary boundaries concepts. We distil principles for this field of research going forward and introduce three case studies which will form the basis of research on these topics.
1354-1013
Gillson, Lindsey
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Seddon, Alistair W.R.
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Motti, Ondřej
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Zhang, Ke
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Kirsten, Kelly
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Gell, Peter
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Marchant, Rob A.
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Schworer, Christoph
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Razanatsoa, Estelle
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Lane, Paul J.
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Courtney-Mustaphi, Colin J.
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Dearing, John
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Gillson, Lindsey
cd4b890d-344d-4ebe-a32e-8b122368ac4f
Seddon, Alistair W.R.
6a362716-3b20-4068-8fdb-68e00ff0f55d
Motti, Ondřej
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Zhang, Ke
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Kirsten, Kelly
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Gell, Peter
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Marchant, Rob A.
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Schworer, Christoph
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Razanatsoa, Estelle
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Lane, Paul J.
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Courtney-Mustaphi, Colin J.
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Dearing, John
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Gillson, Lindsey, Seddon, Alistair W.R., Motti, Ondřej, Zhang, Ke, Kirsten, Kelly, Gell, Peter, Marchant, Rob A., Schworer, Christoph, Razanatsoa, Estelle, Lane, Paul J., Courtney-Mustaphi, Colin J. and Dearing, John (2025) Exploring the interface between planetary boundaries and palaeoecology. Global Change Biology, 31 (1). (doi:10.1111/gcb.70017).

Record type: Article

Abstract

The concepts of planetary boundaries are influential in the sustainability literature and assist in delineating the ‘safe operating spaces’ beyond which critical Earth system processes could collapse. Moving away from our current trajectory towards ‘hothouse Earth’ will require knowledge of how Earth systems have varied throughout the Holocene, and whether and how far we have deviated from past ranges of variability. Such information can inform decisions about where change could be resisted, accepted or where adaptation is inevitable. The need for information on long-term (Holocene) change provides an interface for palaeoecology and sustainability that remains underexploited. In this position paper, we explore this interface, first discussing the need for long-term perspectives and introducing examples where palaeoecology has been used in defining safe operating spaces and constraining limits of acceptable change. We describe advances in quantitative methods for analysis of time-series data that strengthen the contribution of palaeoecology to the concepts of planetary boundaries and safe operating spaces. We consider the importance of issues of scaling from landscape to regional and global scales in operationalising planetary boundaries concepts. We distil principles for this field of research going forward and introduce three case studies which will form the basis of research on these topics.

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Global Change Biology - 2025 - Gillson - Exploring the Interface Between Planetary Boundaries and Palaeoecology - Version of Record
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Accepted/In Press date: 17 November 2024
Published date: 16 January 2025

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 504427
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/504427
ISSN: 1354-1013
PURE UUID: c368bbc3-a5c9-4302-a662-93338addc008
ORCID for John Dearing: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-1466-9640

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Date deposited: 09 Sep 2025 17:17
Last modified: 11 Sep 2025 02:12

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Contributors

Author: Lindsey Gillson
Author: Alistair W.R. Seddon
Author: Ondřej Motti
Author: Ke Zhang
Author: Kelly Kirsten
Author: Peter Gell
Author: Rob A. Marchant
Author: Christoph Schworer
Author: Estelle Razanatsoa
Author: Paul J. Lane
Author: Colin J. Courtney-Mustaphi
Author: John Dearing ORCID iD

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