2010
DOI: 10.1007/s10531-010-9834-9
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Ecosystem services and biodiversity conservation: concepts and a glossary

Abstract: The RUBICODE project draws on expertise from a range of disciplines to develop and integrate frameworks for assessing the impacts of environmental change on ecosystem service provision, and for rationalising biodiversity conservation in that light. With such diverse expertise and concepts involved, interested parties will not be familiar with all the key terminology. This paper defines the terms as used within the project and, where useful, discusses some reasoning behind the definitions. Terms are grouped by … Show more

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Cited by 157 publications
(115 citation statements)
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“…By interpreting what they observed against the background of their own discipline, Jerneck et al (2011) illustrated the problems by demonstrating that social scientists may misinterpret the term 'uncertainty' in natural science debates as an indicator of scientific disagreements, not as an unavoidable data problem. Another example is the research on ecosystem services, the 'benefits that humans recognise as obtained from ecosystems that support, directly or indirectly, their survival and quality of life' (Harrington et al 2010). Popularized by the Millennium Assessment (MA), which integrated social and biosciences and used the term as a metaphor to highlight the social importance of natural systems (MA 2005), it was turned into an operational economic concept by Costanza et al (1997).…”
Section: The Challenge Of Interdisciplinaritymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…By interpreting what they observed against the background of their own discipline, Jerneck et al (2011) illustrated the problems by demonstrating that social scientists may misinterpret the term 'uncertainty' in natural science debates as an indicator of scientific disagreements, not as an unavoidable data problem. Another example is the research on ecosystem services, the 'benefits that humans recognise as obtained from ecosystems that support, directly or indirectly, their survival and quality of life' (Harrington et al 2010). Popularized by the Millennium Assessment (MA), which integrated social and biosciences and used the term as a metaphor to highlight the social importance of natural systems (MA 2005), it was turned into an operational economic concept by Costanza et al (1997).…”
Section: The Challenge Of Interdisciplinaritymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Links Between Functional Diversity and Social Actor Strategies ES are the benefits that humans obtain from ecosystems that support, directly or indirectly, their survival and quality of life (3,(12)(13)(14). Here ES are used as a link between the ecological concept of functional diversity and the social concept of social actor strategies (Fig.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…They were complemented by ecological variables tightly related to geophysical features, e.g., temperature, slope. These external variables integrate concepts such as drivers of change (Bennett et al 2009) or pressures (Harrington et al 2010, Villamagna et al 2013) and enable the consideration of feedback effects from ES.…”
Section: The Influence Network Framework (Inf)mentioning
confidence: 99%