Publication Details

Category Text Publication
Reference Category Journals
DOI 10.3097/LO.201751
Title (Primary) Does the ecosystem service concept reach its limits in urban environments?
Author Beichler, S.A.; Bastian, O.; Haase, D.; Heiland, S.; Kabisch, N.; Müller, F.
Source Titel Landscape Online
Year 2017
Department CLE; SUSOZ
Volume 51
Page From 1
Page To 21
Language englisch
Keywords ecosystem definition; urban ecosystem services; normative principle; human input; trade-off; land use; ecosystem service bundles
UFZ wide themes RU1;
Abstract There is a rapidly growing body of literature on the theory about the ecosystem service concept and the practical assessment of ecosystem services in different contexts ranging from natural to urban environments. Yet, where does the concept reach its limits? This paper critically reflects the application of the ecosystem service concept in urban environments illustrating the handling of urban structures (incl. built-up areas) and the risk that the normative principle of the concept could be missed. It is shown that in theory urban structures refer to a variety of ecosystem concepts. As a starting point for ecosystem service assessments, these could be classified into natural, managed, constructed and overbuilt systems. Since ecosystem service concepts do not directly refer to a specific ecosystem definition, but to biophysical structures and processes, all of these classes could be included. However, the dependency on context and scale makes a differentiation in practical ecosystem services assessment challenging. We conclude that the ecosystem service concept does not reach its limits in urban environments, but urban environments represent an extreme case characterized by multifunctionality and a high degree of modification that enables to uncover research challenges applying in any environment. There is a need for a more transparent reporting of theoretical and methodological assumptions to facilitate the comparability between ecosystem service assessments. Comprehensive approaches that consider multiple ecosystem services and include human input, human modification, the ecosystem status as well as their interactions are required to understand the spatial relations between ecosystem services delivered by different ecosystems.
Persistent UFZ Identifier https://www.ufz.de/index.php?en=20939&ufzPublicationIdentifier=19617
Beichler, S.A., Bastian, O., Haase, D., Heiland, S., Kabisch, N., Müller, F. (2017):
Does the ecosystem service concept reach its limits in urban environments?
Landscape Online 51 , 1 - 21 10.3097/LO.201751