Effects of land management on the Supply and Distribution of ecosystem services

    Project: Research

    Project Details

    Description

    Ecosystem services can be defined as the benefits humans obtain
    from ecosystems, including material goods such as food and fibres
    (provisioning services), immaterial benefits such as aesthetic and
    spiritual enjoyment (cultural services), and biophysical and
    biogeochemical processes (regulating services). In previous research
    we showed that most ecosystem services are co-produced by
    combining natural and anthropogenic capital, the latter including
    human (knowledge and skills), social (sense of community),
    manufactured (tools and infrastructures) and financial capital
    (investments and credits). Understanding the relative importance of
    natural and anthropogenic capitals in the supply of ecosystem
    services is one of the most important challenges in ecosystem service
    research that still remains under-studied. Here, we will investigate
    how increasing land management intensification and the substitution
    of natural capital by human, social, technological and financial
    capitals affect (i) the sustainable supply of multiple ecosystem
    services, (ii) the equitable distribution of those services across
    different stakeholders and multiple spatial scales, in terms of use and
    demand; and (iii) how governance of ecosystem services impacts on
    both natural and anthropogenic capitals underpinning service supply.
    ESuDis is organized in three work packages (WPs). WP1 is devoted
    to the conceptualization, organization and coordination of the project
    (Tasks 1.1-1.3), and to the synthesis and dissemination of its
    outcomes (Task 1.4). WP2 investigates the relationships between the
    increasing substitution of natural capital by anthropogenic capital on
    the supply of ecosystem services (Task 2.1), and on the use and
    demand by different stakeholders (Task 2.2), in order to understand
    its effects on the distribution of ecosystem services among
    stakeholders at multiple spatial scales (Task 2.3). WP3 aims to reveal
    how the governance regime of different ecosystem services impact on
    the level of co-production in their supply (Task 3.1), how relationships
    among stakeholders enable the flow and (un-)equal distribution of
    ecosystem services (Task 3.2), and how the configuration of
    ecosystem service governance at multiple spatial scales relates to the
    distribution of services among stakeholders (Task 3.3). Our
    interdisciplinary research will contribute to put into practice the new
    framework of the Biodiversity Exploratories, which has been
    expanded for the next phase to include additional drivers of the
    effects of land management on biodiversity and ecosystem services
    and its consequences for the social-ecological system. In this way,
    our research will provide a novel aspect to the Biodiversity
    Exploratories by combining existing biophysical data with social
    surveys, statistical modelling and social network analyses to
    understand the interaction of both natural and anthropogenic capitals
    in social-ecological systems for the sustainable provision of
    ecosystem services.
    AcronymESuDis
    StatusFinished
    Period13.07.2031.12.23

    Collaborative partners

    • Leuphana Universität Lüneburg (lead)
    • Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research – UFZ (Project partner)
    • CSIC - Instituto Pirenaico de Ecología (IPE) (Project partner)
    • University of Bern (Project partner)

    Funding

    • German Research Foundation

    Project grants

    • German Research Foundation (DFG)

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