National Ecosystem Assessments in Europe: A Review
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In: BioScience, Vol. 66, No. 10, 01.10.2016, p. 813-828.
Research output: Journal contributions › Scientific review articles › Research
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TY - JOUR
T1 - National Ecosystem Assessments in Europe
T2 - A Review
AU - Schröter, Matthias
AU - Albert, Christian
AU - Marques, Alexandra
AU - Tobon, Wolke
AU - Lavorel, Sandra
AU - Maes, Joachim
AU - Brown, Claire
AU - Klotz, Stefan
AU - Bonn, Aletta
PY - 2016/10/1
Y1 - 2016/10/1
N2 - National ecosystem assessments form an essential knowledge base for safeguarding biodiversity and ecosystem services. We analyze eight European (sub-)national ecosystem assessments (Portugal, United Kingdom, Spain, Norway, Flanders, Netherlands, Finland, and Germany) and compare their objectives, political context, methods, and operationalization. We observed remarkable differences in breadth of the assessment, methods employed, variety of services considered, policy mandates, and funding mechanisms. Biodiversity and ecosystem services are mainly assessed independently, with biodiversity conceptualized as underpinning services, as a source of conflict with services, or as a service in itself. Recommendations derived from our analysis for future ecosystem assessments include the needs to improve the common evidence base, to advance the mapping of services, to consider international flows of services, and to connect more strongly to policy questions. Although the context specificity of national ecosystem assessments is acknowledged as important, a greater harmonization across assessments could help to better inform common European policies and future pan-regional assessments.
AB - National ecosystem assessments form an essential knowledge base for safeguarding biodiversity and ecosystem services. We analyze eight European (sub-)national ecosystem assessments (Portugal, United Kingdom, Spain, Norway, Flanders, Netherlands, Finland, and Germany) and compare their objectives, political context, methods, and operationalization. We observed remarkable differences in breadth of the assessment, methods employed, variety of services considered, policy mandates, and funding mechanisms. Biodiversity and ecosystem services are mainly assessed independently, with biodiversity conceptualized as underpinning services, as a source of conflict with services, or as a service in itself. Recommendations derived from our analysis for future ecosystem assessments include the needs to improve the common evidence base, to advance the mapping of services, to consider international flows of services, and to connect more strongly to policy questions. Although the context specificity of national ecosystem assessments is acknowledged as important, a greater harmonization across assessments could help to better inform common European policies and future pan-regional assessments.
KW - boundary object
KW - conservation
KW - ecosystem service mapping
KW - IPBES
KW - quantification
KW - Ecosystems Research
KW - Environmental Governance
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84994235689&partnerID=8YFLogxK
UR - https://www.mendeley.com/catalogue/9ce31c16-d7ce-3daf-900e-2d13577fa5f9/
U2 - 10.1093/biosci/biw101
DO - 10.1093/biosci/biw101
M3 - Scientific review articles
C2 - 28533561
AN - SCOPUS:84994235689
VL - 66
SP - 813
EP - 828
JO - BioScience
JF - BioScience
SN - 0006-3568
IS - 10
ER -