Literature DB >> 11478236

Proposal for including what is valuable to ecosystems in environmental assessments.

D E Campbell1.   

Abstract

Assessment scientists and managers depend on social values to identify the goals that will be used to guide environmental assessments. These goals are commonly identified by examining the vested interests of the various social groups that are stakeholders in a region. However, knowledge about what people value represents only part of the information needed to identify comprehensive assessment goals for environmental systems that include both economic and ecological components and processes. All parties also need to understand what is valuable to ecosystems because that determines the ecological patterns and processes that prevail in the long run. The competition among alternate system designs for available energy determines the viability of the choices that people make for their environment. Ecosystems that prevail in competition use the process of self-organization to create system designs that maximize the use of ever-changing sources of available energy. The efficacy of ecosystem designs can be evaluated using the maximum empower principle, which states that ecosystems evolve toward designs that maximize empower (energy use per unit time). Energy is an accounting quantity that normalizes the different kinds of energy developed in a system so that they may be compared. The counter-intuitive and sometimes controversial results that come from energy analyses are illustrated by examining three environmental problems on the interface between ecology and economics. A process for identifying and using social and ecosystem values to guide environmental assessments is proposed using a conceptual energy systems model that shows how these processes might interact within a region. The probability of realizing a given change in system empower production is suggested as a decision criterion that can be used by managers to evaluate the efficacy of alternatives.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2001        PMID: 11478236     DOI: 10.1021/es001818n

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Environ Sci Technol        ISSN: 0013-936X            Impact factor:   9.028


  6 in total

1.  Keeping the books for environmental systems: an emergy analysis of West Virginia.

Authors:  Daniel Campbell; Maria Meisch; Thomas Demoss; John Pomponio; M Patricia Bradley
Journal:  Environ Monit Assess       Date:  2004-06       Impact factor: 2.513

2.  The Emergy Perspective of Sustainable Trends in Puerto Rico from 1960 to 2013.

Authors:  Alejandra M González-Mejía; Xin Cissy Ma
Journal:  Ecol Econ       Date:  2017       Impact factor: 5.389

3.  Integrated emergy and economic evaluation of lotus-root production systems on reclaimed wetlands surrounding the Pearl River Estuary, China.

Authors:  Hong-Fang Lu; Yao-Wen Tan; Wen-Sheng Zhang; Yan-Chun Qiao; Daniel E Campbell; Lang Zhong; Hai Ren
Journal:  J Clean Prod       Date:  2017-08-01       Impact factor: 9.297

4.  Emergy-based indicators for evaluating ecosystem health: A case study of three benthic ecosystem networks influenced by coastal upwelling in northern Chile (SE Pacific coast).

Authors:  Fernando Berrios; Daniel E Campbell; Marco Ortiz
Journal:  Ecol Indic       Date:  2018-12       Impact factor: 4.958

5.  Emergy assessment of three home courtyard agriculture production systems in Tibet Autonomous Region, China.

Authors:  Fa-Chun Guan; Zhi-Peng Sha; Yu-Yang Zhang; Jun-Feng Wang; Chao Wang
Journal:  J Zhejiang Univ Sci B       Date:  2016-08       Impact factor: 3.066

6.  A phased approach for assessing combined effects from multiple stressors.

Authors:  Charles A Menzie; Margaret M MacDonell; Moiz Mumtaz
Journal:  Environ Health Perspect       Date:  2007-01-24       Impact factor: 9.031

  6 in total

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