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| Photo: D. Nepstad | 
Protecting
 places of global environmental importance such as the Great Barrier 
Reef and the Amazon rainforest from climate change will require reducing
 the other pressures they face, for example overfishing, fertilizer 
pollution or land clearing.
The team of 
researchers warns that localised issues, such as declining water quality
 from nutrient pollution or deforestation, can exacerbate the effects of
 climatic extremes, such as heat waves and droughts. This reduces the 
ability of ecosystems to cope with the impacts of climate change.
"Managing
 local ecosystems can help maintain and enhance their resilience in the 
face of global changes. It is often easier to implement incentives for 
stewardship of the biosphere in local commons than in global commons, 
where the uncertainty is lower, and where positive results of management
 may be more visible," says Centre science director Carl Folke, one of the study’s co-authors.
Unique World Heritage Sites
The
 authors examined three UNESCO World Heritage Sites: Spain’s Doñana 
wetlands, the Amazon rainforest and the Great Barrier Reef. While many 
ecosystems are crucial to their local people, these ecosystems also have
 a global importance - hence their designation as World Heritage Sites. 
For instance, the Amazon rainforest is a globally important climate 
regulator.
Like coral reefs, rainforests and 
wetlands around the world, these sites are all under increasing pressure
 from both climate change and local threats.
For
 example, rising temperatures and severe dry spells threaten the Amazon 
rainforest and, in combination with deforestation, could turn the 
ecosystem into a drier, fire-prone and species-poor woodland. Curtailing
 deforestation and canopy damage from logging and quickening forest 
regeneration could protect the forest from fire, maintain regional 
rainfall and thus prevent a drastic ecosystem transformation.
"A
 combination of bold policy interventions and voluntary agreements has 
slowed deforestation in the Brazilian Amazon to one fourth of its 
historical rate. The stage is now set to build on this success by 
ramping up efforts to tame logging and inhibit fire," says co-author 
Daniel Nepstad, executive director of Earth Innovation Institute.
An unfolding disaster
"All
 three examples play a critical role in maintaining global biodiversity.
 If these systems collapse, it could mean the irreversible extinction of
 species," says the study’s lead author Marten Scheffer. He is Chair of 
the Department of Aquatic Ecology and Water Quality Management at the 
Netherlands' Wageningen University.
In the 
Great Barrier Reef the global threats are ocean acidification and coral 
bleaching, both induced by carbon dioxide emissions. Local threats such 
as overfishing, nutrient runoff and unprecedented amounts of dredging 
will reduce the reef’s resilience to acidification and bleaching.
"It’s
 an unfolding disaster. The reef needs less pollution from agricultural 
runoff and port dredging, less carbon dioxide emissions from fossil 
fuels, and less fishing pressure. Ironically, Australia is still 
planning to develop new coal mines and expand coal ports, despite global
 efforts to transition quickly towards renewable energy," says co-author
 Terry Hughes, director of the Australian Research Council Centre of 
Excellence for Coral Reef Studies.
"As a wealthy country, Australia has the capability and responsibility to improve its management of the reef," adds Hughes.
No excuse - act locally
The
 authors suggest their evidence places responsibility on governments and
 society to manage local threats to iconic ecosystems, and such efforts 
will complement the growing momentum to control global greenhouse gases.
 Yet, in the three cases they examined, they found local governance 
trends are worrisome.
According to co-author Scott Barrett, the problem is one of incentives.
"These
 ecosystems are of value to the whole world, not only to the countries 
that have jurisdiction over them. It may be necessary for other 
countries to bring pressure to bear on these ‘host’ countries or to 
offer them assistance, to ensure that these iconic ecosystems are 
protected for the benefit of all of humanity," says Barrett, who is a 
professor at Columbia University’s School of International and Public 
Affairs.
Above all, the paper raises awareness of the great opportunities for enhanced local action.
"Local
 management options are well understood and not too expensive. So there 
is really no excuse for countries to let this slip away, especially when
 it comes to ecosystems that are of vital importance for maintaining 
global biodiversity," says Scheffer.
Citation
Scheffer,
 M., Barrett, S., Carpenter, S.R., Folke, C., Green, A.J., Holmgren, M.,
 Hughes, T.P., Kosten, S., va de Leemput, I.A., Nepstad, D.C., van Nes, 
E. H., Peeters, E.T.H.M., and Brian Walker. Creating a safe operating 
space for iconic ecosystems, Science 2015.

Professor Carl Folke
 is Science Director of the Stockholm Resilience Centre and has 
extensive experience in transdisciplinary collaboration between natural 
and social scientists. He has worked with ecosystem dynamics and 
services as well as the social and economic dimension of ecosystem 
management and proactive measures to manage resilience. 







