(HAB)itual challenges: how does social-ecological risk influence Lake Erie harmful algal bloom management approaches?
Topics: Environment
, Environmental Science
, Political Geography
Keywords: social-ecological networks, harmful algal blooms, Lake Erie, ecological risk, risk
Session Type: Virtual Paper Abstract
Day: Sunday
Session Start / End Time: 2/27/2022 02:00 PM (Eastern Time (US & Canada)) - 2/27/2022 03:20 PM (Eastern Time (US & Canada))
Room: Virtual 26
Authors:
Meghan Klasic, University of California - Davis
Rachel Lamb, Maryland Department of the Environment
Kelsey Leonard, University of Waterloo
Vanessa Vargas-Nguyen, University of Maryland, Center for Environmental Science
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Abstract
Research in environmental governance shows that misalignment between management boundaries and ecological systems can be addressed through collaboration. Factors associated with social risk like trust and opportunity for free riding help shape the types of collaboration pursued in different contexts. Receiving much less attention is the role that ecological risk plays in shaping the collaborative activities pursued. Using the case of Lake Erie harmful algal bloom (HABs) management, we employ social-ecological network analysis (SEN) to explore how the social and ecological risk influences the management activities pursued in the region. HABs have been a policy challenge in the Lake Erie region for more than 40 years despite widespread international to local efforts to reduce them. We analyzed a set of planning documents written between 2012 and 2017 and found that the number and type of actors involved in Lake Erie HABs management fluctuates across basins of differing ecological risk. We also found that the type of activity pursued (e.g., building new institutions, information sharing) differs across basins of differing levels of ecological risk. In this paper, we measured watershed risk based on the contribution of phosphorus, the widely accepted limiting factor in the Lake Erie HABs challenge. This research builds on existing SENA scholarship by explicitly considering the role of ecological risk in influencing policy networks.
(HAB)itual challenges: how does social-ecological risk influence Lake Erie harmful algal bloom management approaches?
Category
Virtual Paper Abstract
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