2011
DOI: 10.5751/es-04456-160421
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Ecosystem Services Linking Social and Ecological Systems: River Brownification and the Response of Downstream Stakeholders

Abstract: ABSTRACT. The theoretical framework of ecosystem services and that of resilience thinking are combined in an empirical case study of a social-ecological system. In the River Helge å catchment in southern Sweden, a slow increase in dissolved organic carbon (DOC) results in brownification of the water with consequences on ecosystem services in the lower part of the catchment of concern by local resource managers. An assessment of ecosystem service delivery was conducted to (1) identify plausible drivers of brown… Show more

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Cited by 43 publications
(32 citation statements)
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“…The same conclusion applies to upstream and downstream ecological sustainability issues such as brownification within the Helge å River catchment [133], and the effects the rapid increase of Greylag geese has had on Lake Hammarsjön and the surrounding wetland vegetation [8,18].…”
Section: Towards Governance Of Wet Grasslands As a Green Infrastructurementioning
confidence: 99%
“…The same conclusion applies to upstream and downstream ecological sustainability issues such as brownification within the Helge å River catchment [133], and the effects the rapid increase of Greylag geese has had on Lake Hammarsjön and the surrounding wetland vegetation [8,18].…”
Section: Towards Governance Of Wet Grasslands As a Green Infrastructurementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Suggested reasons include deterioration of nesting grounds by geese grazing, increased predation by fox and birds of prey, and less spring rainfall, reducing the life span of wet ponds (SI Text). In 2007, farmers of wet grasslands experienced a prolonged flooding, leaving the fields covered in brown sludge (26). The sludge made the grass unfeasible for grazing and mowing, thereby affecting provisioning services negatively that year and nesting of wading birds the following year.…”
Section: Effects On Natural Capitalmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Decreasing sulfur deposition rates allow catchment soils to recover from acidification, where the resulting decrease in acidity and/or ionic strength of the soil solution may increase the solubility of soil organic matter (OM) and consequently OC leaching (4,16,17). Some studies have linked the OC rise to recent changes in land-use practices, such as the drainage and burning of peatlands (18,19), or to changes in land cover (20). Other proposed explanations are the increase in atmospheric carbon dioxide levels (21) and the elevated atmospheric deposition of nitrogen (22,23), both of which support increased plant productivity.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%