Changes in biodiversity and trade-offs among ecosystem services, stakeholders, and components of well-being: the contribution of the International Long-Term Ecological Research network (ILTER) to Programme on Ecosystem Change and Society (PECS)
Vadineanu, Angheluta
- 1Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico
- 2University of Colorado System
- 3Instituto de Ecologia - Mexico
- 4INRAE
- 5UK Centre for Ecology & Hydrology (UKCEH)
- 6Finnish Environment Institute
- 7Slovak Academy of Sciences
- 8Polish Academy of Sciences
- 9Hokkaido University
- 10Technion Israel Institute of Technology
- 11Arizona State University
- 12
- 13Universidade de Lisboa
- 14National Research Foundation - South Africa
- 15University of Bucharest
Journal
Ecology and Society
ISSN
1708-3087
Open Access
gold
Volume
21
The International Long-Term Ecological Research (ILTER) network comprises > 600 scientific groups conducting site-based research within 40 countries. Its mission includes improving the understanding of global ecosystems and informs solutions to current and future environmental problems at the global scales. The ILTER network covers a wide range of social-ecological conditions and is aligned with the Programme on Ecosystem Change and Society (PECS) goals and approach. Our aim is to examine and develop the conceptual basis for proposed collaboration between ILTER and PECS. We describe how a coordinated effort of several contrasting LTER site-based research groups contributes to the understanding of how policies and technologies drive either toward or away from the sustainable delivery of ecosystem services. This effort is based on three tenets: transdisciplinary research; cross-scale interactions and subsequent dynamics; and an ecological stewardship orientation. The overarching goal is to design management practices taking into account trade-offs between using and conserving ecosystems toward more sustainable solutions. To that end, we propose a conceptual approach linking ecosystem integrity, ecosystem services, and stakeholder well-being, and as a way to analyze trade-offs among ecosystem services inherent in diverse management options. We also outline our methodological approach that includes: (i) monitoring and synthesis activities following spatial and temporal trends and changes on each site and by documenting cross-scale interactions; (ii) developing analytical tools for integration; (iii) promoting trans-site comparison; and (iv) developing conceptual tools to design adequate policies and management interventions to deal with trade-offs. Finally, we highlight the heterogeneity in the social-ecological setting encountered in a subset of 15 ILTER sites. These study cases are diverse enough to provide a broad cross-section of contrasting ecosystems with different policy and management drivers of ecosystem conversion; distinct trends of biodiversity change; different stakeholders' preferences for ecosystem services; and diverse components of well-being issues.
Name
document.pdf
Type
Main Article
Size
820.32 KB
Format
Adobe PDF
Checksum
(MD5):5cbcb4061e245e52ccae971df968eac0
