Kategorie |
Textpublikation |
Referenztyp |
Zeitschriften |
DOI |
10.1002/pan3.10421
|
Lizenz |
|
Titel (primär) |
From biodiversity to health: Quantifying the impact of diverse ecosystems on human well-being |
Autor |
Ulrich, W.; Batáry, P.; Baudry, J.; Beaumelle, L.; Bucher, R.; Čerevková, A.; de la Riva, E.G.; Felipe-Lucia, M.R.; Gallé, R.; Kesse-Guyot, E.; Rembiałkowska, E.; Rusch, A.; Stanley, D.; Birkhofer, K. |
Quelle |
People and Nature |
Erscheinungsjahr |
2023 |
Department |
iDiv; ESS |
Band/Volume |
5 |
Heft |
1 |
Seite von |
69 |
Seite bis |
83 |
Sprache |
englisch |
Topic |
T5 Future Landscapes |
Keywords |
diversity; ecosystem disservices; ecosystem services; matrix models; multifunctionality; statistical inference; structural equation modelling |
Abstract |
- Ample evidence suggests positive effects of species
diversity on ecosystem functioning and services in natural and
agricultural landscapes. Less obvious and even contested are the effects
of such diversity on human well-being. This state of art partly stems
from methodological difficulties to evaluate and quantify these effects
and imprecise conceptual frameworks.
- Here we propose a conceptual framework that links
different aspects of diversity, particularly species and genetic
richness, to ecosystem functioning, ecosystem services and disservices,
and different aspects of well-being. We review current approaches for
the study of diversity–well-being relationships and identify
shortcomings and principle obstacles, mainly stemming from theoretical
premises that are too imprecise.
- We discuss five basic methodological approaches to
link diversity to well-being: matrix models, indirect inference, Price
partitioning, structural equation modelling, and environmental
inference.
- We call for a stricter terminology with respect to
the different aspects of functioning, multifunctionality and well-being
and highlight the need to evaluate each step in the different pathways
from diversity to well-being. A full understanding of ecological
constraints on human well-being requires consideration of trade-offs in
diversity effects, of contrasting perceptions of well-being, and of
ecosystem disservices. We also call for appropriate long-term
socio-ecological research platforms to gather relevant data about
ecosystem functioning and well-being across space and time.
|
dauerhafte UFZ-Verlinkung |
https://www.ufz.de/index.php?en=20939&ufzPublicationIdentifier=26448 |
Ulrich, W., Batáry, P., Baudry, J., Beaumelle, L., Bucher, R., Čerevková, A., de la Riva, E.G., Felipe-Lucia, M.R., Gallé, R., Kesse-Guyot, E., Rembiałkowska, E., Rusch, A., Stanley, D., Birkhofer, K. (2023):
From biodiversity to health: Quantifying the impact of diverse ecosystems on human well-being
People Nat. 5 (1), 69 - 83 10.1002/pan3.10421 |