Bedoya EcologicalServices Lecture
Bedoya EcologicalServices Lecture
Bedoya EcologicalServices Lecture
https://www.vectorstock.com/royalty-free-vector/ecosystem-
services-word-concepts-banner-vector-29160650
Outline
An ecosystem includes all of the plants,
animals, microbes, soil, air and water within a
physical space and the interactions between
them. Humans are an integral part of marine,
freshwater and terrestrial ecosystems.
https://in.pinterest.com/pin/753578950133244734/
https://haribon.org.ph/support-our-
work/rainforestation/watersheds-
and-ridge-to-reef/
Natural capital can be
considered as a stock from
which ecosystem services
flow, and the processes of
ecosystems are the
procedures or methods
used to create the flow of
services.
- from where a flow of services
that benefits the well being of
Ecosystem Services are produced by humans into the future.
Transformations of Natural Capital
Humans rely on ecosystem services.
Ecosystems provide these services when they are working well.
• As the concept of ES is Most ecosystem services are greatly undervalued by society
anthropocentric and because they are considered "free" and inexhaustible, i.e., we
provides a way of don't have formal markets to buy and sell most ES.
understanding how The lack of awareness of the value of ecosystems helps drive
important ecosystems the conversion of natural ecosystems into other systems that
produce marketable goods (e.g., by clearing a forest to sell the
and the ways they work
timber, converting bushland to cropland) thereby disrupting or
are for supporting life
diminishing the ecosystem processes (e.g., clearing forests
and providing for reduces carbon storage, reduces soil protection from the
human needs, we need erosive impact of rain or overland flow).
to understand how Current trends suggest that we are in the process of
ecosystems work so dramatically altering our ecosystems and that these changes
that we don’t negatively could have severely detrimental effects on the future provision
affect these processes. of ESS and our quality of life.
Types of Ecosystem
Services
Categories (UNEP, 2005) and examples of ecosystem services (Daily, 1997; Daily et al., 2000; Malmqvist https://www.earthwiseaware.org/what-are-
and Rundle, 2002; UNEP, 2005), according to the Millennium Ecosystem Assessment framework. ecosystem-services/
https://www.researchgate.net/figure/Categories-UNEP-2005-and-examples-of-ecosystem-services-Daily-
1997-Daily-et-al_fig1_284717721
https://oceanwealth.org/ecosystem-services/
WHAT’S UP?
https://reefresilience.org/wp-content/uploads/EBMguide_2010.pdf
© 2005 Millennium Ecosystem Assessment
https://www.millenniumassessment.org/en/BoardStatement.html
https://www.fao.org/in-
action/incentives-for-ecosystem-
services/toolkit/building-an-
incentive-package/step-1/en/
■ Measures to conserve natural resources are more likely to
succeed if local communities are given ownership of them, share the
benefits, and are involved in decisions.
■ Even today’s technology and knowledge can reduce considerably the human
impact on ecosystems. They are unlikely to be deployed fully, however, until
ecosystem services cease to be perceived as free and limitless, and their full
value is taken into account.
https://www.mountainresearchinitiative.org/news-page-all/128-new-publication/2455-the-ecosystem-
service-scarcity-path-to-forest-recovery-a-local-forest-transition-in-the-ecuadorian-andes
Challenges
…
Based on available scientific evidence, it is
certain that:
• Many of the human activities that
modify or destroy natural ecosystems
may cause deterioration of ecological
• Ecosystem services are essential to services whose value, in the long term,
civilization. dwarfs the short-term economic
• Ecosystem services operate on such a grand benefits society gains from those
scale and in such intricate and little-explored activities.
ways that most could not • Considered globally, very large
be replaced by technology. numbers of species and populations
• Human activities are already impairing the are required to sustain ecosystem
flow of ecosystem services on a large scale. services.
• If current trends continue, humanity will • The functioning of many ecosystems
dramatically alter virtually all of Earth’s could be restored if appropriate
remaining natural ecosystems within actions were taken in time.
a few decades.
the ES concept has been increasingly The MEA (2005) categories of
used as a framework for action. CES (including Cultural diversity;
BUT, important gaps remain and Spiritual and religious values;
the ES concept currently does not Knowledge systems; Educational
do justice to the reality of human- values; Inspiration; Aesthetic
ecosystem interactions values; Social relations; Sense of
place; Cultural heritage values;
Rather than focusing on a unitary regime of and Recreation and ecotourism)
simple utilization, economic valuation, and trade- and similarly emphasized values
offs, this paradigm actively supports the cultivation drawn from, rather than
of diverse cultural and ecosystem values, practices, cultivated in, nature.
and services at the landscape scale. For CES, such BUT, the complexities of
a paradigm shift is more than a technical process; human-environment
it necessarily involves political recognition and relationships remain
valorization of minority values and strategies. insufficiently addressed.
Challenges
C. Combertia, *, T.F. Thorntona , V. W de Echeverriaa , & T. Patterson, 2015
…
to Reduce the Degradation of Ecosystem Services
Ways https://www.millenniumassessment.org/documents/document.429.aspx.pdf
https://www.quora.com/Whose-responsibility-
is-it-to-preserve-the-ecosystem
Ways Forward…
INFLUENCE INDIVIDUAL BEHAVIOR
https://oppla.eu/product/18880
DEVELOP AND USE ENVIRONMENT-FRIENDLY TECHNOLOGY
Gretchen C. Daily, Susan Alexander, Paul R. Ehrlich, Larry Goulder, Jane Lubchenco, Pamela A. Matson, Harold A. Mooney, Sandra Postel, Stephen H. Schneider,
David Tilman, George M. Woodwel, 1997. Ecosystem Services: Benefits Supplied to Human Societies by Natural Ecosystems (Issues in Ecology: American
Society of America). https://www.esa.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/03/issue2.pdf
Joachim H. Spangenberg, Christina von Haaren, Josef Settele, 2014. The ecosystem service cascade: Further developing the metaphor. Integrating societal
processes to accommodate social processes and planning, and the case of bioenergy, Ecological Economics, Volume 104, 2014, Pages 22-32, ISSN 0921-8009,
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ecolecon.2014.04.025. (https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0921800914001426)
https://www.earthwiseaware.org/what-are-ecosystem-services/
https://www.reutersevents.com/sustainability/essay-valuing-natural-capital
https://www.researchgate.net/figure/Categories-UNEP-2005-and-examples-of-ecosystem-services-Daily-1997-Daily-et-al_fig1_284717721
https://www.shutterstock.com/image-vector/ecosystem-services-subdivision-categories-collection-outline-2128033043
https://haribon.org.ph/support-our-work/rainforestation/watersheds-and-ridge-to-reef/
https://roa.midatlanticocean.org/ocean-ecosystem-and-resources/characterizing-the-mid-atlantic-ocean-ecosystem/ecosystem-services/
https://www.researchgate.net/figure/Categories-UNEP-2005-and-examples-of-ecosystem-services-Daily-1997-Daily-et-al_fig1_284717721
https://ecology.fnal.gov/ecosystem-services/
https://socratic.org/questions/define-ecosystem-service-and-give-two-examples
https://oceanwealth.org/ecosystem-services/
http://learnline.cdu.edu.au/units/env205/module1/eco.html
https://www.millenniumassessment.org/documents/document.429.aspx.pdf
https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/9/7/1107/htm
Thank You