Ecosystem antifragility: beyond integrity and resilience
Author(s) -
Miguel Equihua,
Mariana Espinosa Aldama,
Carlos Gershenson,
Oliver López-Corona,
Mariana Munguía,
Octavio Pérez-Maqueo,
Elvia Ramírez-Carrillo
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
peerj
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.927
H-Index - 70
ISSN - 2167-8359
DOI - 10.7717/peerj.8533
Subject(s) - ecosystem , resilience (materials science) , environmental resource management , computer science , total human ecosystem , ecosystem health , psychological resilience , ecosystem services , robustness (evolution) , ecology , environmental science , biology , psychology , biochemistry , physics , gene , psychotherapist , thermodynamics
We review the concept of ecosystem resilience in its relation to ecosystem integrity from an information theory approach. We summarize the literature on the subject identifying three main narratives: ecosystem properties that enable them to be more resilient; ecosystem response to perturbations; and complexity. We also include original ideas with theoretical and quantitative developments with application examples. The main contribution is a new way to rethink resilience, that is mathematically formal and easy to evaluate heuristically in real-world applications: ecosystem antifragility. An ecosystem is antifragile if it benefits from environmental variability. Antifragility therefore goes beyond robustness or resilience because while resilient/robust systems are merely perturbation-resistant, antifragile structures not only withstand stress but also benefit from it.
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