WHAT IS ENVIRONMENTAL RESILIENCE?
WHAT IS ENVIRONMENTAL RESILIENCE?
When I first encountered the phrase environmental resilience, I pictured a rubber ball bouncing back after being dropped. But it’s not quite that simple. In ecological science, resilience means much more: the capacity of natural systems—ecosystems, landscapes, even human-nature communities—to absorb disturbances, adapt to change and recover from shocks without collapsing into something entirely different.
To put it plainly: it’s about nature being able to bounce back. Even more, it is about nature being able to reorganise itself, shift when needed, yet still deliver the services we and other species depend on.
But here’s the nub: originally, environmental resilience was considered a natural attribute of the Earth. Forests recover. Wetlands rebound. Coral reefs regrow. Yet at a time when climate change, pollution, habitat loss and urban sprawl are pushing our systems ever closer to breaking-points, human intervention is increasingly required.
Why should we care?
In my view, resilience matters deeply. If the environment around us cannot bounce back when we run into big trouble — storms, floods, droughts, heatwaves, even pandemics of pests or diseases — then the whole system starts to wobble. And when that happens, not only nature suffers, but we do too: our agriculture, our fisheries, our clean water, our safety from disasters. The scientific community concurs: resilience matters for biodiversity, ecosystem services, livelihoods and adaptation to climate extremes.
Here is how I like to unpack it:
Absorptive capacity: Can the system take a hit—storm, fire, flood—without major damage?
Adaptive capacity: Can it adjust when conditions change—temperature shifts, new pests, new human uses?
Restorative capacity: If it is damaged, can it regenerate and recover?
Real-life examples that speak volumes
Let me quote some vivid cases to ground this:
Mangrove forests along coasts act like giant shock absorbers. They mitigate storm surges, hold back erosion, and regenerate after typhoons.
Urban green spaces may sound mundane, but in cities they reduce the “heat island” effect, improve air quality, and support biodiversity—even though humans built the city around them.
Farms practicing agroecology, with crop diversity and soil-health focus, are more resilient to droughts or pest outbreaks than monocultures.
Watershed restoration efforts give cities and rural areas better flood control and clean water—again, working with nature rather than just building concrete walls.
These aren’t just anecdotal: the underlying science confirms that systems with more species, more redundancy (many species performing similar ecological roles), and stronger adaptive capacity are more resilient. Yet caution: a 2022 study found that resilience in forests—tropical, dry and temperate—has been declining rather than improving, likely because of water stress and climate variability. If resilience is slipping, we’re on thin ice.
Human help: Do we need it?
Yes — and here’s where my opinions surface. Ideally, nature would do its thing unaided. But with the cumulative and rapid changes humanity is imposing—deforestation, pollution, fragmentation of landscapes, climate acceleration—we can’t just sit back and pray.
So what should we do?
First: stop further destruction. I believe strongly that even doing nothing harmful is a huge help. In my local neighborhood there’s an empty lot untouched for ten years that’s turned into a “mini-forest” on its own. Nature shows us that given a chance, it will bounce back.
Second: repair damage where we’ve caused it. My mountaineering days with the UP Mountaineers taught me the motto: “Take nothing but pictures, leave nothing but footprints.” If we’ve messed up nature, Christian teaching tells us that repentance includes repair. Could we apply that to our natural world? I say: yes, we must.
Third: intervene thoughtfully, when nature’s recovery is blocked or too slow. This might mean reforestation, restoring wetlands, creating corridors so species can move, and building green infrastructure in cities. Human–nature collaboration.
Fourth: think systemically. Resilience isn’t one-off; it’s built through diversity, connectivity, redundancy, flexible governance.
My message to you and to all of us
If you cannot undo the damage you’ve done to nature, then at least stop doing more damage. That’s something we all can do. If you walk in the woods or climb a mountain and practice “leave nothing but footprints”, you are participating in environmental resilience.
I also ask: What if we considered ourselves stewards rather than conquerors of the land? What if our default action was not to build, pave, cut, extract—but instead to protect, allow, give nature space? That lot growing its mini-forest near me is proof enough.
We should not leave resilience to chance. We should aid, encourage, facilitate. Because when ecosystems collapse—or shift into undesirable states—they may never come back the same. It might be less green, less diverse, less rich in life.
In the end, environmental resilience is not just a scientific term. It is a moral, communal, ecological imperative. We owe it to every living thing, and to our children.
Let that empty lot near us remind us: when given space, nature can heal itself. Let our motto remind us: when we enter Nature, may we leave only footprints, not scars.
Because if we truly believe the environment should bounce back “no matter what it takes,” then perhaps we should help it—just a little. And when we cannot help, at least we must not hinder.
Ramon Ike V. Seneres, www.facebook.com/ike.seneres
iseneres@yahoo.com, senseneres.blogspot.com 09088877282/04-13-2026