A metacoupling lens on the co-production of nature’s contributions to people: Insights for sustainability

Research output: Contributions to collected editions/worksChapterpeer-review

Standard

A metacoupling lens on the co-production of nature’s contributions to people: Insights for sustainability. / Mayer, Anna; Martín-López, Berta; Locatelli, Bruno et al.
XXXXXXXXX. Academic Press Inc., 2025. (Advances in Ecological Research).

Research output: Contributions to collected editions/worksChapterpeer-review

Harvard

Mayer, A, Martín-López, B, Locatelli, B, Rabeschini, G, Liu, J, Loos, J, Felipe-Lucia, MR, Riechers, M & Isaac, R 2025, A metacoupling lens on the co-production of nature’s contributions to people: Insights for sustainability. in XXXXXXXXX. Advances in Ecological Research, Academic Press Inc. https://doi.org/10.1016/bs.aecr.2025.02.001

APA

Mayer, A., Martín-López, B., Locatelli, B., Rabeschini, G., Liu, J., Loos, J., Felipe-Lucia, M. R., Riechers, M., & Isaac, R. (in press). A metacoupling lens on the co-production of nature’s contributions to people: Insights for sustainability. In XXXXXXXXX (Advances in Ecological Research). Academic Press Inc.. https://doi.org/10.1016/bs.aecr.2025.02.001

Vancouver

Mayer A, Martín-López B, Locatelli B, Rabeschini G, Liu J, Loos J et al. A metacoupling lens on the co-production of nature’s contributions to people: Insights for sustainability. In XXXXXXXXX. Academic Press Inc. 2025. (Advances in Ecological Research). doi: 10.1016/bs.aecr.2025.02.001

Bibtex

@inbook{7cdc9254778942908ef3f48864a1c7f7,
title = "A metacoupling lens on the co-production of nature{\textquoteright}s contributions to people: Insights for sustainability",
abstract = "Nature{\textquoteright}s contributions to people (NCP) broaden up the ecosystem service concept and support human life in multiple ways. These contributions are partially derived from nature together with inputs from humans, a process known as co-production of NCP. The sustainability of NCP co-production not only depends on the use of anthropogenic capitals but also on where they are produced, how they are mobilized, or the access to these capitals. In fact, NCP co-production can occur at different places and across spatial scales: it may be affected by factors not only within a system but in other systems near and far. To this end, the metacoupling framework advances the telecoupling framework and offers a lens to analyze human-nature interactions within and between systems across spatial scales. Here, we illustrate the application of the metacoupling framework on NCP co-production by using the examples of wood production in temperate forests in Germany, natural pest control in German meadows provided by migratory birds, and non-material NCP from giant panda tourism in China. We reflect on the challenges of adopting a metacoupling lens when analyzing NCP co-production, such as working with different disciplines and engaging with diverse knowledge systems, defining social-ecological system perimeter, or collecting metacoupled data across scales based on mixed-method approaches. While considering the relevance of metacoupling of NCP co-production for sustainability, we highlight the opportunities of adopting this lens, such as visualizing hidden and overlooked sustainability issues or making global sustainability a relevant aspect of local decisions.",
keywords = "Metacoupling, Telecoupling, Nature{\textquoteright}s contributions to people (NCP), Co-production, Human-derived capitals, Anthropogenic assets, Social-ecological interactions, Human-nature interactions",
author = "Anna Mayer and Berta Mart{\'i}n-L{\'o}pez and Bruno Locatelli and Gabriela Rabeschini and Jianguo Liu and Jacqueline Loos and Felipe-Lucia, {Mar{\'i}a R.} and Maraja Riechers and Roman Isaac",
year = "2025",
doi = "10.1016/bs.aecr.2025.02.001",
language = "English",
series = "Advances in Ecological Research",
publisher = "Academic Press Inc.",
booktitle = "XXXXXXXXX",
address = "United States",

}

RIS

TY - CHAP

T1 - A metacoupling lens on the co-production of nature’s contributions to people: Insights for sustainability

AU - Mayer, Anna

AU - Martín-López, Berta

AU - Locatelli, Bruno

AU - Rabeschini, Gabriela

AU - Liu, Jianguo

AU - Loos, Jacqueline

AU - Felipe-Lucia, María R.

AU - Riechers, Maraja

AU - Isaac, Roman

PY - 2025

Y1 - 2025

N2 - Nature’s contributions to people (NCP) broaden up the ecosystem service concept and support human life in multiple ways. These contributions are partially derived from nature together with inputs from humans, a process known as co-production of NCP. The sustainability of NCP co-production not only depends on the use of anthropogenic capitals but also on where they are produced, how they are mobilized, or the access to these capitals. In fact, NCP co-production can occur at different places and across spatial scales: it may be affected by factors not only within a system but in other systems near and far. To this end, the metacoupling framework advances the telecoupling framework and offers a lens to analyze human-nature interactions within and between systems across spatial scales. Here, we illustrate the application of the metacoupling framework on NCP co-production by using the examples of wood production in temperate forests in Germany, natural pest control in German meadows provided by migratory birds, and non-material NCP from giant panda tourism in China. We reflect on the challenges of adopting a metacoupling lens when analyzing NCP co-production, such as working with different disciplines and engaging with diverse knowledge systems, defining social-ecological system perimeter, or collecting metacoupled data across scales based on mixed-method approaches. While considering the relevance of metacoupling of NCP co-production for sustainability, we highlight the opportunities of adopting this lens, such as visualizing hidden and overlooked sustainability issues or making global sustainability a relevant aspect of local decisions.

AB - Nature’s contributions to people (NCP) broaden up the ecosystem service concept and support human life in multiple ways. These contributions are partially derived from nature together with inputs from humans, a process known as co-production of NCP. The sustainability of NCP co-production not only depends on the use of anthropogenic capitals but also on where they are produced, how they are mobilized, or the access to these capitals. In fact, NCP co-production can occur at different places and across spatial scales: it may be affected by factors not only within a system but in other systems near and far. To this end, the metacoupling framework advances the telecoupling framework and offers a lens to analyze human-nature interactions within and between systems across spatial scales. Here, we illustrate the application of the metacoupling framework on NCP co-production by using the examples of wood production in temperate forests in Germany, natural pest control in German meadows provided by migratory birds, and non-material NCP from giant panda tourism in China. We reflect on the challenges of adopting a metacoupling lens when analyzing NCP co-production, such as working with different disciplines and engaging with diverse knowledge systems, defining social-ecological system perimeter, or collecting metacoupled data across scales based on mixed-method approaches. While considering the relevance of metacoupling of NCP co-production for sustainability, we highlight the opportunities of adopting this lens, such as visualizing hidden and overlooked sustainability issues or making global sustainability a relevant aspect of local decisions.

KW - Metacoupling

KW - Telecoupling

KW - Nature’s contributions to people (NCP)

KW - Co-production

KW - Human-derived capitals

KW - Anthropogenic assets

KW - Social-ecological interactions

KW - Human-nature interactions

U2 - 10.1016/bs.aecr.2025.02.001

DO - 10.1016/bs.aecr.2025.02.001

M3 - Chapter

T3 - Advances in Ecological Research

BT - XXXXXXXXX

PB - Academic Press Inc.

ER -