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Using forty years of research to view Bahía Almirante on the caribbean coast of Panama as an integrated social-ecological system

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dc.contributor.author Collin, Rachel
dc.contributor.author Adelson, Anne E.
dc.contributor.author Altieri, Andrew H.
dc.contributor.author Clark, Kasey E.
dc.contributor.author Davis, Kristen
dc.contributor.author Giddings, Sarah N.
dc.contributor.author Kastner, Samuel
dc.contributor.author Mach, Leon
dc.contributor.author Pawlak, Geno
dc.contributor.author Sjögersten, Sofie
dc.contributor.author Torres, Mark
dc.contributor.author Scott, Cinda P.
dc.date.accessioned 2025-02-21T02:31:24Z
dc.date.available 2025-02-21T02:31:24Z
dc.date.issued 2024
dc.identifier 0272-7714
dc.identifier.citation Collin, Rachel, Adelson, Anne E., Altieri, Andrew H., Clark, Kasey E., Davis, Kristen, Giddings, Sarah N., Kastner, Samuel, Mach, Leon, Pawlak, Geno, Sjögersten, Sofie, Torres, Mark, and Scott, Cinda P. 2024. "Using forty years of research to view Bahía Almirante on the caribbean coast of Panama as an integrated social-ecological system." <em>Estuarine Coastal and Shelf Science</em>, 306. <a href="https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ecss.2024.108878">https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ecss.2024.108878</a>.
dc.identifier.uri https://hdl.handle.net/10088/122166
dc.description.abstract Tropical coastal systems play a vital role in sustaining biodiversity, performing ecological functions, and providing ecosystem services. They are also home to 75% of people in the tropics. Given that coasts face intense anthropogenic pressures including climate change, human population growth, and land-use change, it is critical to develop an understanding of the linkages between physical processes, biological interactions, and social dynamics in the complex environment where land and sea meet. Here, we review and synthesize 40 years of research from the Bahia Almirante region on the Caribbean coast of Panama, summarizing the large knowledge base of marine ecology, paleontology, ecosystem science and social science and adding newer information on physical processes. We describe how the system experiences both global and local drivers that are common to many tropical coastal systems and examine the crosscutting linkages that shape the system's response to change. To accomplish this, we utilized the Press-Pulse Dynamics framework as a lens to organize the many strands of research and to allow the interdisciplinary research team to generate explicit illustrative hypotheses about important socioecological linkages related to stressors such as the variability in precipitation and increased migration and tourism. The goal for this review and synthesis is to encourage researchers in Bahia Almirante and other estuarine systems to consider the landscape and seascape more broadly, to reach beyond their immediate field of expertise, and to consider both social and environmental aspects as they seek to increase system understanding in ways that can enable more productive public discourse surrounding policy, infrastructural change, and conservation.
dc.publisher ACADEMIC PRESS LTD- ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
dc.relation.ispartof Estuarine Coastal and Shelf Science 306
dc.title Using forty years of research to view Bahía Almirante on the caribbean coast of Panama as an integrated social-ecological system
dc.type article
sro.identifier.refworksID 107322
sro.identifier.itemID 174910
sro.description.unit stri
sro.identifier.doi 10.1016/j.ecss.2024.108878
sro.publicationPlace LONDON; 24-28 OVAL RD, LONDON NW1 7DX, ENGLAND


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