Ecosystem Services and Economic Theory: Integration for Policy-Relevant Research

Title
Ecosystem Services and Economic Theory: Integration for Policy-Relevant Research
Publication Date
2008
Author(s)
Fisher, B
Turner, K
Jefferiss, P
Kirby, C
Morling, P
Mowatt, S
Naidoo, R
Paavola, J
Strassburg, B
Yu, D
Balmford, A
Zylstra, M
Brouwer, R
de Groot, R
Farber, S
Ferraro, P
Green, R
Hadley, David
( author )
OrcID: https://orcid.org/0000-0001-8634-2586
Email: dhadley@une.edu.au
UNE Id une-id:dhadley
Harlow, J
Type of document
Journal Article
Language
en
Entity Type
Publication
Publisher
John Wiley & Sons, Inc
Place of publication
United States of America
DOI
10.1890/07-1537.1
UNE publication id
une:10840
Abstract
It has become essential in policy and decision-making circles to think about the economic benefits (in addition to moral and scientific motivations) humans derive from well-functioning ecosystems. The concept of ecosystem services has been developed to address this link between ecosystems and human welfare. Since policy decisions are often evaluated through cost-benefit assessments, an economic analysis can help make ecosystem service research operational. In this paper we provide some simple economic analyses to discuss key concepts involved in formalizing ecosystem service research. These include the distinction between services and benefits, understanding the importance of marginal ecosystem changes, formalizing the idea of a safe minimum standard for ecosystem service provision, and discussing how to capture the public benefits of ecosystem services. We discuss how the integration of economic concepts and ecosystem services can provide policy and decision makers with a fuller spectrum of information for making conservation-conversion trade-offs. We include the results from a survey of the literature and a questionnaire of researchers regarding how ecosystem service research can be integrated into the policy process. We feel this discussion of economic concepts will be a practical aid for ecosystem service research to become more immediately policy relevant.
Link
Citation
Ecological Applications, 18(8), p. 2050-2067
ISSN
1939-5582
1051-0761
Start page
2050
End page
2067

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