IFEVA   02662
INSTITUTO DE INVESTIGACIONES FISIOLOGICAS Y ECOLOGICAS VINCULADAS A LA AGRICULTURA
Unidad Ejecutora - UE
congresos y reuniones científicas
Título:
Provision and Use of Ecosystem Services
Autor/es:
KRIS HAVSTAD; MARTIN AGUIAR; LAURA YAHDJIAN; OSVALDO E. SALA
Lugar:
Corpus Christi, Texas, USA
Reunión:
Congreso; Society for Range Management Annual Convention; 2016
Institución organizadora:
Society of Rangeland Management
Resumen:
Ecosystem services are the benefits that society receives from ecosystems. They include the provisioning of many essential goods such as food, fiber, and wood, the regulation of climate, the pollination of crops, and the provisioning of intellectual inspiration and recreational environment. They usually involve several ecological functions and processes such as primary production and nutrient cycling, and they are intimately inter-related with biological diversity. Ecosystem services are generally classified in four different types: provisioning, supporting, regulating, and cultural, and landscapes have provided this array of goods and services to humans for millennia. Certainly, the emphasis in recent decades has shifted from managing for a sustained supply of ecosystem services to reconciling supplies with competing demands. Land management is increasingly focused on reconciling supply of and demand for ecosystem services among different stakeholders. What has changed is the ecological, social and economic complexities of the competing demands for ecosystem goods and services. This reconciliation is primarily a function of 3 drivers: landscape capacities, socio-economic conditions, and time. Each driver has key gradients that dictate either supply of or demand for ecosystem services, or both. How these various gradients of these drivers interact is a major determinant of ecosystem services supplied from any landscape. Increasingly, land management either influences or is influenced by the interactions of time, landscape ecology, and human demands. Understanding these drivers, their gradients and their interactions is critical to the continued provisioning of ecosystem services from rangelands, especially as demands change over time.