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Metadata Access | Data from: Building a bridge between adaptive capacity and adaptive potential to understand responses to environmental change

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  <identifier identifierType="DOI">10.7923/TMCG-P106</identifier>
  <creators>
    <creator>
      <creatorName nameType="Personal">Seaborn, Travis</creatorName>
      <givenName>Travis</givenName>
      <familyName>Seaborn</familyName>
      <nameIdentifier nameIdentifierScheme="ORCID" schemeURI="https://orcid.org">https://orcid.org/0000-0003-1036-7028</nameIdentifier>
    </creator>
  </creators>
  <titles>
    <title xml:lang="en">Data from: Building a bridge between adaptive capacity and adaptive potential to understand responses to environmental change</title>
  </titles>
  <publisher>Northwest Knowledge Network (NKN) at the University of Idaho</publisher>
  <publicationYear>2021</publicationYear>
  <resourceType resourceTypeGeneral="Dataset"/>
  <subjects>
    <subject subjectScheme="Fields of Science and Technology (FOS)">FOS: Earth and related environmental sciences</subject>
    <subject subjectScheme="Fields of Science and Technology (FOS)">FOS: Social sciences</subject>
    <subject subjectScheme="Fields of Science and Technology (FOS)">FOS: Biological sciences</subject>
  </subjects>
  <contributors>
    <contributor contributorType="ProjectMember">
      <contributorName nameType="Personal">Griffith, David</contributorName>
      <givenName>David</givenName>
      <familyName>Griffith</familyName>
      <nameIdentifier nameIdentifierScheme="ORCID" schemeURI="https://orcid.org">https://orcid.org/0000-0001-6702-6764</nameIdentifier>
    </contributor>
    <contributor contributorType="ProjectMember">
      <contributorName nameType="Personal">Kliskey, Andrew</contributorName>
      <givenName>Andrew</givenName>
      <familyName>Kliskey</familyName>
      <nameIdentifier nameIdentifierScheme="" schemeURI=""/>
    </contributor>
    <contributor contributorType="ProjectMember">
      <contributorName nameType="Personal">Caudill, Christopher</contributorName>
      <givenName>Christopher</givenName>
      <familyName>Caudill</familyName>
      <nameIdentifier nameIdentifierScheme="ORCID" schemeURI="https://orcid.org">https://orcid.org/0000-0002-7129-8620</nameIdentifier>
    </contributor>
  </contributors>
  <dates>
    <date dateType="Available">2021-02-26</date>
  </dates>
  <language>en</language>
  <relatedIdentifiers>
    <relatedIdentifier relatedIdentifierType="DOI" relationType="Reviews" resourceTypeGeneral="DataPaper">10.1111/gcb.15579</relatedIdentifier>
  </relatedIdentifiers>
  <sizes>
    <size>445 kb</size>
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  <rightsList>
    <rights rightsURI="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/legalcode">Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial Share Alike 4.0 International</rights>
  </rightsList>
  <descriptions>
    <description xml:lang="en" descriptionType="Abstract">Adaptive capacity is a topic at the forefront of environmental change research with roots in both social, ecological, and evolutionary science. It closely related to the evolutionary biology concept of adaptive potential. In this systematic literature review we: 1) Summarize the history of these topics and related fields; 2) Assess relationship(s) between the concepts among disciplines and the use of the terms in climate change research, and evaluate methodologies, metrics, taxa biases, and the geographic scale of studies; and 3) Provide a synthetic conceptual framework to clarify concepts. Bibliometric analyses revealed the terms have been used most frequently in conservation and evolutionary biology journals, respectively. There has been a greater growth in studies of adaptive potential than adaptive capacity since 2001, but a greater geographical extent of adaptive capacity studies. Few studies include both, and use is often superficial. Our synthesis considers adaptive potential as one process contributing to adaptive capacity of complex systems, notes ‘sociological’ adaptive capacity definitions include actions aimed at desired outcome (i.e., policies) as a system driver whereas ‘biological’ definitions exclude such drivers, and suggests models of adaptive capacity require integration of evolutionary and social-ecological system components.</description>
  </descriptions>
  <fundingReferences>
    <fundingReference>
      <funderName>National Science Foundation</funderName>
      <funderIdentifier funderIdentifierType="Crossref Funder ID">https://doi.org/10.13039/100000001</funderIdentifier>
      <awardNumber awardURI="https://www.nsf.gov/awardsearch/showAward?AWD_ID=1757324">OIA-1757324</awardNumber>
      <awardTitle>Linking Genome to Phenome to Predict Adaptive Responses of Organisms to Changing Landscapes</awardTitle>
    </fundingReference>
  </fundingReferences>
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