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      Environmental Impacts of the Use of Ecosystem Services: Case Study of Birdwatching

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          Abstract

          The main reason for promoting the concept of ecosystem services lies in its potential to contribute to environmental conservation. Highlighting the benefits derived from ecosystems fosters an understanding of humans’ dependence on nature, as users of ecosystem services. However, the act of using ecosystem services may not be environmentally neutral. As with the use of products and services generated within an economy, the use of ecosystem services may lead to unintended environmental consequences throughout the ‘ecosystem services supply chain.’ This article puts forward a framework for analyzing environmental impacts related to the use of ecosystem services, indicating five categories of impact: (1) direct impacts (directly limiting the service’s future availability); and four categories of indirect impacts, i.e., on broader ecosystem structures and processes, which can ultimately also affect the initial service: (2) impacts related to managing ecosystems to maximize the delivery of selected services (affecting ecosystems’ capacity to provide other services); (3) impacts associated with accessing ecosystems to use their services (affecting other ecosystem components); (4) additional consumption of products, infrastructure or services required to use a selected ecosystem service, and their life-cycle environmental impacts; and (5) broader impacts on the society as a whole (environmental awareness of ecosystem service users and other stakeholders). To test the usefulness of this framework, the article uses the case study of birdwatching, which demonstrates all of the above categories of impacts. The article justifies the need for a broader consideration of environmental impacts related to the use of ecosystem services.

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          Ecosystem service bundles for analyzing tradeoffs in diverse landscapes.

          A key challenge of ecosystem management is determining how to manage multiple ecosystem services across landscapes. Enhancing important provisioning ecosystem services, such as food and timber, often leads to tradeoffs between regulating and cultural ecosystem services, such as nutrient cycling, flood protection, and tourism. We developed a framework for analyzing the provision of multiple ecosystem services across landscapes and present an empirical demonstration of ecosystem service bundles, sets of services that appear together repeatedly. Ecosystem service bundles were identified by analyzing the spatial patterns of 12 ecosystem services in a mixed-use landscape consisting of 137 municipalities in Quebec, Canada. We identified six types of ecosystem service bundles and were able to link these bundles to areas on the landscape characterized by distinct social-ecological dynamics. Our results show landscape-scale tradeoffs between provisioning and almost all regulating and cultural ecosystem services, and they show that a greater diversity of ecosystem services is positively correlated with the provision of regulating ecosystem services. Ecosystem service-bundle analysis can identify areas on a landscape where ecosystem management has produced exceptionally desirable or undesirable sets of ecosystem services.
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            Natural Capital and Sustainable Development

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              Ecosystem services: From eye-opening metaphor to complexity blinder

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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                +48426355353 , kronenbe@uni.lodz.pl
                Journal
                Environ Manage
                Environ Manage
                Environmental Management
                Springer US (Boston )
                0364-152X
                1432-1009
                4 July 2014
                4 July 2014
                2014
                : 54
                : 617-630
                Affiliations
                Department of International Economics, University of Lodz, POW 3/5, 90-255 Lodz, Poland
                Article
                317
                10.1007/s00267-014-0317-8
                4129236
                24993794
                0105de66-a6d1-408a-a376-72c7f5057511
                © The Author(s) 2014

                Open AccessThis article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License which permits any use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author(s) and the source are credited.

                History
                : 17 October 2013
                : 16 June 2014
                Categories
                Article
                Custom metadata
                © Springer Science+Business Media New York 2014

                Environmental management, Policy & Planning
                indirect environmental impacts,sustainable consumption,reasonable consumption,rebound effect,birdwatching,birding

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