Copyright (c) 2013 John L. Jerz

Ecosystems and Human Well-Being: Current State and Trends (Hassan, Scholes, Ash, 2005)

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CurrentStateTrends.jpg

Humans have changed ecosystems more rapidly and extensively in the last 50 years than in any comparable period of human history. We have done this to meet the growing demands for food, fresh water, timber, fiber, and fuel. While changes to ecosystems have enhanced the well-being of billions of people, they have also caused a substantial and largely irreversible loss in diversity of life on Earth, and have strained the capacity of ecosystems to continue providing critical services.

Among the findings:

Approximately 60% of the services that support life on Earth are being degraded or used unsustainably. The harmful consequences of this degradation could grow significantly worse in the next 50 years.

Only four ecosystem services have been enhanced in the last 50 years: crops, livestock, aquaculture, and the sequestration of carbon.

The capacity of ecosystems to neutralize pollutants, protect us from natural disasters, and control the outbreaks of pests and diseases is declining significantly.

Terrestrial and freshwater systems are reaching the limits of their ability to absorb nitrogen.

Harvesting of fish and other resources from coastal and marine systems is compromising their ability to deliver food in the future.

Richly illustrated with maps and graphs, Current State and Trends presents an assessment of Earth's ability to provide twenty-four distinct services essential to human well-being. These include food, fiber, and other materials; the regulation of the climate and fresh water systems; underlying support systems such as nutrient cycling; and the fulfillment of cultural, spiritual, and aesthetic values. The volume pays particular attention to the current health of key ecosystems, including inland waters, forests, oceans, croplands, and dryland systems, among others. It will be an indispensable reference for scientists, environmentalists, agency professionals, and students.

p.29 An ecosystem is a dynamic complex of plant, animal, and micro-organism communities and the nonliving environment interacting as a functional unit... The concept of an ecosystem provides a valuable framework for analyzing and acting on the linkages between people and the environment... In order to implement the ecosystem approach, decision-makers need to understand the multiple effects on an ecosystem of any management or policy change.
 
p.443 This chapter focuses on the roles that ecosystems play in modulating the effects of extreme events, and in particular in protecting human well-being from the impacts of floods and fire. Protection can be defined as contributing to the prevention of harm as well as to the receipt of benefits.
 
p.830 The human and environmental forces that drive changes in ecosystems, and thereby changes in ecosystem services and human well-being, are highly variable from place to place. As such, generic explanations or statements of causality are difficult to create. Driving forces are almost always multiple and interactive, so that a one-to-one linkage between particular driving forces and changes in ecosystems and ecosystem services is usually not possible.

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