Ecosystem services
Definition - the fundamental life-support services provided by natural ecosystems, without which human civilization would cease to thrive.
OR - the conditions and
processes through which natural ecosystems, and the species that
make them up,sustain and fulfill human life.
[Excerpted from: Ecosystem
Services: Benefits Supplied to Human Societies by Natural
Ecosystems by 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. Woodwell]
Overview
Human societies derive many essential goods from natural
ecosystems, including seafood, game animals, fodder, fuelwood,
timber, and pharmaceutical products. These goods represent
important and familiar parts of the economy. What has been less
appreciated until recently is that natural ecosystems also
perform fundamental life-support services without which human
civilizations would cease to thrive. These include the
purification of air and water, detoxification and decomposition
of wastes, regulation of climate, regeneration of soil fertility,
and production and maintenance of biodiversity, from which key
ingredients of our agricultural, pharmaceutical, and industrial
enterprises are derived.
This array of services is generated by a complex interplay of
natural cycles powered by solar energy and operating across a
wide range of space and time scales. The process of waste
disposal, for example, involves the life cycles of bacteria as
well as the planet-wide cycles of major chemical elements such as
carbon and nitrogen. Such processes are worth many trillions of
dollars annually. Yet because most of these benefits are not
traded in economic markets, they carry no price tags that could
alert society to changes in their supply or deterioration of
underlying ecological systems that generate them. Because threats
to these systems are increasing, there is a critical need for
identification and monitoring of ecosystem services both locally
and globally, and for the incorporation of their value into
decision-making processes.
Historically, the nature and value of Earths life support
systems have largely been ignored until their disruption or loss
highlighted their importance. For example, deforestation has
belatedly revealed the critical role forests serve in regulating
the water cycle -- in particular, in mitigating floods, droughts,
the erosive forces of wind and rain, and silting of dams and
irrigation canals. Today, escalating impacts of human activities
on forests, wetlands, and other natural ecosystems imperil the
delivery of such services. The primary threats are land use
changes that cause losses in biodiversity as well as disruption
of carbon, nitrogen, and other biogeochemical cycles;
human-caused invasions of exotic species; releases of toxic
substances; possible rapid climate change; and depletion of
stratospheric ozone.
Based on available scientific evidence, we are certain that:
Ecosystem services are essential to civilization. Ecosystem
services operate on such a grand scale and in such intricate and
little-explored ways that most could not be replaced by
technology. Human activities are already impairing the flow of
ecosystem services on a large scale. If current trends continue,
humanity will dramatically alter virtually all of Earths
remaining natural ecosystems within a few decades. In addition,
based on current scientific evidence, we are confident that: Many
of the human activities that modify or destroy natural ecosystems
may cause deterioration of ecological services whose value, in
the long term, dwarfs the short-term economic benefits society
gains from those activities. Considered globally, very large
numbers of species and populations are required to sustain
ecosystem services. The functioning of many ecosystems could be
restored if appropriate actions were taken in time. We believe
that land use and development policies should strive to achieve a
balance between sustaining vital ecosystem services and pursuing
the worthy short-term goals of economic development.