| Literature DB >> 31776967 |
Anna-Lena Rau1, Verena Burkhardt2, Christian Dorninger2, Cecilia Hjort3,4, Karin Ibe2,5, Lisa Keßler2, Jeppe A Kristensen6, Andrew McRobert6, William Sidemo-Holm3, Heike Zimmermann2, David J Abson2,7, Henrik von Wehrden2,8, Johan Ekroos3.
Abstract
Temporal aspects of ecosystem services have gained surprisingly little attention given that ecosystem service flows are not static but change over time. We present the first systematic review to describe and establish how studies have assessed temporal patterns in supply and demand of ecosystem services. 295 studies, 2% of all studies engaging with the ecosystem service concept, considered changes in ecosystem services over time. Changes were mainly characterised as monotonic and linear (81%), rather than non-linear or through system shocks. Further, a lack of focus of changing ecosystem service demand (rather than supply) hampers our understanding of the temporal patterns of ecosystem services provision and use. Future studies on changes in ecosystem services over time should (1) more explicitly study temporal patterns, (2) analyse trade-offs and synergies between services over time, and (3) integrate changes in supply and demand and involve and empower stakeholders in temporal ecosystem services research.Entities:
Keywords: Ecosystem service dynamics; Ecosystem service supply; Linear change; Periodic change; Stakeholder involvement
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31776967 PMCID: PMC7239989 DOI: 10.1007/s13280-019-01292-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ambio ISSN: 0044-7447 Impact factor: 5.129