A review of urban ecosystem services: six key challenges for future research

Publikation: Beiträge in ZeitschriftenÜbersichtsarbeitenForschung

Standard

A review of urban ecosystem services: six key challenges for future research. / Lüderitz, Christopher; Brink, Ebba; Gralla, Fabienne et al.
in: Ecosystem Services, Jahrgang 14, 01.08.2015, S. 98-112.

Publikation: Beiträge in ZeitschriftenÜbersichtsarbeitenForschung

Harvard

APA

Vancouver

Lüderitz C, Brink E, Gralla F, Hermelingmeier V, Rau AL, Abson D et al. A review of urban ecosystem services: six key challenges for future research. Ecosystem Services. 2015 Aug 1;14:98-112. doi: 10.1016/j.ecoser.2015.05.001

Bibtex

@article{975f8a74361446c9bad340dfcc9f5d51,
title = "A review of urban ecosystem services: six key challenges for future research",
abstract = "Global urbanization creates opportunities and challenges for human well-being and transition towards sustainability. Urban areas are human-environment systems that depend fundamentally on ecosystems, and thus require an understanding of the management of urban ecosystem services to ensure sustainable urban planning. The purpose of this study is to provide a systematic review of urban ecosystems services research, which addresses the combined domain of ecosystem services and urban development. We examined emerging trends and gaps in how urban ecosystem services are conceptualized in peer-reviewed case study literature, including the geographical distribution of research, the development and use of the urban ecosystem services concept, and the involvement of stakeholders. We highlight six challenges aimed at strengthening the concept's potential to facilitate meaningful inter- and transdisciplinary work for ecosystem services research and planning. Achieving a cohesive conceptual approach in the research field will address (i) the need for more extensive spatial and contextual coverage, (ii) continual clarification of definitions, (iii) recognition of limited data transferability, (iv) more comprehensive stakeholder involvement, (v) more integrated research efforts, and (vi) translation of scientific findings into actionable knowledge, feeding information back into planning and management. We conclude with recommendations for conducting further research while incorporating these challenges.",
keywords = "Sustainability Science, Cities, Ecosystem service cascade model, Operationalization, Peri-urban, Social-ecological systems, Structure-function-benefit",
author = "Christopher L{\"u}deritz and Ebba Brink and Fabienne Gralla and Verena Hermelingmeier and Anna-Lena Rau and David Abson and Lang, {Daniel J.} and {von Wehrden}, Henrik and Christine Wamsler and Ryuei Sasaki and Stefan Partelow and Moritz Meyer and Niven Lisa and Lars Panzer",
year = "2015",
month = aug,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1016/j.ecoser.2015.05.001",
language = "English",
volume = "14",
pages = "98--112",
journal = "Ecosystem Services",
issn = "2212-0416",
publisher = "Elsevier B.V.",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - A review of urban ecosystem services

T2 - six key challenges for future research

AU - Lüderitz, Christopher

AU - Brink, Ebba

AU - Gralla, Fabienne

AU - Hermelingmeier, Verena

AU - Rau, Anna-Lena

AU - Abson, David

AU - Lang, Daniel J.

AU - von Wehrden, Henrik

AU - Wamsler, Christine

AU - Sasaki, Ryuei

AU - Partelow, Stefan

AU - Meyer, Moritz

AU - Lisa, Niven

AU - Panzer, Lars

PY - 2015/8/1

Y1 - 2015/8/1

N2 - Global urbanization creates opportunities and challenges for human well-being and transition towards sustainability. Urban areas are human-environment systems that depend fundamentally on ecosystems, and thus require an understanding of the management of urban ecosystem services to ensure sustainable urban planning. The purpose of this study is to provide a systematic review of urban ecosystems services research, which addresses the combined domain of ecosystem services and urban development. We examined emerging trends and gaps in how urban ecosystem services are conceptualized in peer-reviewed case study literature, including the geographical distribution of research, the development and use of the urban ecosystem services concept, and the involvement of stakeholders. We highlight six challenges aimed at strengthening the concept's potential to facilitate meaningful inter- and transdisciplinary work for ecosystem services research and planning. Achieving a cohesive conceptual approach in the research field will address (i) the need for more extensive spatial and contextual coverage, (ii) continual clarification of definitions, (iii) recognition of limited data transferability, (iv) more comprehensive stakeholder involvement, (v) more integrated research efforts, and (vi) translation of scientific findings into actionable knowledge, feeding information back into planning and management. We conclude with recommendations for conducting further research while incorporating these challenges.

AB - Global urbanization creates opportunities and challenges for human well-being and transition towards sustainability. Urban areas are human-environment systems that depend fundamentally on ecosystems, and thus require an understanding of the management of urban ecosystem services to ensure sustainable urban planning. The purpose of this study is to provide a systematic review of urban ecosystems services research, which addresses the combined domain of ecosystem services and urban development. We examined emerging trends and gaps in how urban ecosystem services are conceptualized in peer-reviewed case study literature, including the geographical distribution of research, the development and use of the urban ecosystem services concept, and the involvement of stakeholders. We highlight six challenges aimed at strengthening the concept's potential to facilitate meaningful inter- and transdisciplinary work for ecosystem services research and planning. Achieving a cohesive conceptual approach in the research field will address (i) the need for more extensive spatial and contextual coverage, (ii) continual clarification of definitions, (iii) recognition of limited data transferability, (iv) more comprehensive stakeholder involvement, (v) more integrated research efforts, and (vi) translation of scientific findings into actionable knowledge, feeding information back into planning and management. We conclude with recommendations for conducting further research while incorporating these challenges.

KW - Sustainability Science

KW - Cities

KW - Ecosystem service cascade model

KW - Operationalization

KW - Peri-urban

KW - Social-ecological systems

KW - Structure-function-benefit

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84937913591&partnerID=8YFLogxK

U2 - 10.1016/j.ecoser.2015.05.001

DO - 10.1016/j.ecoser.2015.05.001

M3 - Scientific review articles

VL - 14

SP - 98

EP - 112

JO - Ecosystem Services

JF - Ecosystem Services

SN - 2212-0416

ER -

DOI

Zuletzt angesehen

Publikationen

  1. Die Männerumkleide – ein inverses Panoptikon
  2. Erdsystem, Klima und globale Stoffkreisläufe
  3. Die Photobefragung als projektives Verfahren
  4. Marktorientiertes Nachhaltigkeitscontrolling
  5. Gesundheitsförderung Sozial Benachteiligter
  6. Business Model Innovation for Sustainability
  7. Multiplikatives Verständnis in Sachkontexten
  8. Wie geht es den Kindern in Zeiten von Corona?
  9. Benefits of Ecological Engineering Practices
  10. Simulations in Science Education - Status Quo
  11. Klimapolitik mit China und den USA nach 2012
  12. Verteilungseffekte von Kapazitätsmechanismen
  13. Economic impact assessment of climate change
  14. Analyzing Talk and Text II: Thematic Analysis
  15. A Soft Alignment Model for Bug Deduplication
  16. Sustainable Supply Chains im globalen Kontext
  17. Bridging corporate and academic contributions
  18. Spanning Sustainability Management Boundaries
  19. Shiftwork and the length and quality of sleep
  20. Externalisierungspolitik als "travelling model"
  21. Zum Streikrecht in diakonischen Einrichtungen
  22. Warum haben Sie keinen Fernseher, Herr Luhmann?
  23. Arbeitszufriedenheit und flexible Arbeitszeit
  24. Misestimations as a barrier to climate action
  25. Narrating Sustainability through Storytelling
  26. Energie, Klimaschutz und nachhaltige Mobilität
  27. Die wirtschaftlichen Chancen des Klimaschutze
  28. Online-scheduling using past and real-time data
  29. Unpacking the middleground of creative cities
  30. Nachhaltig managen mit der Balanced Scorecard
  31. Linking Cap-and-Trade Systems and Green Finance
  32. Tackling the habitat fragmentation panchreston
  33. Exports and Firm Profitability: Quality matters!
  34. Development of coordination in time estimation