Ecosystem service evaluation to support land - use policy

Regular economic activity takes into account ecosystem goods and services that are exchanged for money in the market [e.g. food, fibre, water] but normally ignores more intangible ones left away from market transactions [e.g. soil protection, climate regulation, disturbance control, habitat provision], even in cases when they become irreversibly impaired. However, because of the increasing pressure brought by the public opinion, the attempts to assign an economic, yet volatile, valuation to ecosystems assets has multiplied in recent years, and policy communities are increasingly compelled to incorporate them into land use planning initiatives. Based on contributions to this special issue, we discuss how the perspective of ecosystem services can contribute to develop sound land-use policies and planning actions. Beyond valuation, several practical implications emerge from the contributions. A myriad of potential tradeoffs must be analyzed because since the provision of some services can be accompanied by the emergence of unexpected dis-services. For example, carbon accumulation based on increasing net primary production rates may simultaneously cut water yields and, hence, water provision. Various existing mechanisms ranging from state-controlled to market-controlled for rewarding the provision of ecosystem services are analyzed and discussed in terms of their capacity to connect nature to land-use planning.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Viglizzo, Ernesto F., Paruelo, José María, Laterra, Pedro, Jobbágy, Esteban G.
Format: Texto biblioteca
Language:eng
Subjects:ECONOMIC AND BIOPHYSICAL VIEWS, EVALUATION METHODS, TRADEOFFS, CARBON BUDGET, CONTINGENT VALUATION, ECONOMIC ACTIVITY, ECOSYSTEM SERVICE, ENVIRONMENTAL ECONOMICS, LAND USE PLANNING, NET PRIMARY PRODUCTION, POLICY APPROACH, PUBLIC ATTITUDE, SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT, TRADE-ENVIRONMENT RELATIONS, TRADE-OFF, WATER YIELD,
Online Access:http://ceiba.agro.uba.ar/cgi-bin/koha/opac-detail.pl?biblionumber=46502
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spelling KOHA-OAI-AGRO:465022021-12-29T18:36:43Zhttp://ceiba.agro.uba.ar/cgi-bin/koha/opac-detail.pl?biblionumber=46502AAGEcosystem service evaluation to support land - use policyViglizzo, Ernesto F.Paruelo, José MaríaLaterra, PedroJobbágy, Esteban G.textengapplication/pdfRegular economic activity takes into account ecosystem goods and services that are exchanged for money in the market [e.g. food, fibre, water] but normally ignores more intangible ones left away from market transactions [e.g. soil protection, climate regulation, disturbance control, habitat provision], even in cases when they become irreversibly impaired. However, because of the increasing pressure brought by the public opinion, the attempts to assign an economic, yet volatile, valuation to ecosystems assets has multiplied in recent years, and policy communities are increasingly compelled to incorporate them into land use planning initiatives. Based on contributions to this special issue, we discuss how the perspective of ecosystem services can contribute to develop sound land-use policies and planning actions. Beyond valuation, several practical implications emerge from the contributions. A myriad of potential tradeoffs must be analyzed because since the provision of some services can be accompanied by the emergence of unexpected dis-services. For example, carbon accumulation based on increasing net primary production rates may simultaneously cut water yields and, hence, water provision. Various existing mechanisms ranging from state-controlled to market-controlled for rewarding the provision of ecosystem services are analyzed and discussed in terms of their capacity to connect nature to land-use planning.Regular economic activity takes into account ecosystem goods and services that are exchanged for money in the market [e.g. food, fibre, water] but normally ignores more intangible ones left away from market transactions [e.g. soil protection, climate regulation, disturbance control, habitat provision], even in cases when they become irreversibly impaired. However, because of the increasing pressure brought by the public opinion, the attempts to assign an economic, yet volatile, valuation to ecosystems assets has multiplied in recent years, and policy communities are increasingly compelled to incorporate them into land use planning initiatives. Based on contributions to this special issue, we discuss how the perspective of ecosystem services can contribute to develop sound land-use policies and planning actions. Beyond valuation, several practical implications emerge from the contributions. A myriad of potential tradeoffs must be analyzed because since the provision of some services can be accompanied by the emergence of unexpected dis-services. For example, carbon accumulation based on increasing net primary production rates may simultaneously cut water yields and, hence, water provision. Various existing mechanisms ranging from state-controlled to market-controlled for rewarding the provision of ecosystem services are analyzed and discussed in terms of their capacity to connect nature to land-use planning.ECONOMIC AND BIOPHYSICAL VIEWSEVALUATION METHODSTRADEOFFSCARBON BUDGETCONTINGENT VALUATIONECONOMIC ACTIVITYECOSYSTEM SERVICEENVIRONMENTAL ECONOMICSLAND USE PLANNINGNET PRIMARY PRODUCTIONPOLICY APPROACHPUBLIC ATTITUDESUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENTTRADE-ENVIRONMENT RELATIONSTRADE-OFFWATER YIELDAgriculture, Ecosystems and Environment
institution UBA FA
collection Koha
country Argentina
countrycode AR
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
En linea
databasecode cat-ceiba
tag biblioteca
region America del Sur
libraryname Biblioteca Central FAUBA
language eng
topic ECONOMIC AND BIOPHYSICAL VIEWS
EVALUATION METHODS
TRADEOFFS
CARBON BUDGET
CONTINGENT VALUATION
ECONOMIC ACTIVITY
ECOSYSTEM SERVICE
ENVIRONMENTAL ECONOMICS
LAND USE PLANNING
NET PRIMARY PRODUCTION
POLICY APPROACH
PUBLIC ATTITUDE
SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT
TRADE-ENVIRONMENT RELATIONS
TRADE-OFF
WATER YIELD
ECONOMIC AND BIOPHYSICAL VIEWS
EVALUATION METHODS
TRADEOFFS
CARBON BUDGET
CONTINGENT VALUATION
ECONOMIC ACTIVITY
ECOSYSTEM SERVICE
ENVIRONMENTAL ECONOMICS
LAND USE PLANNING
NET PRIMARY PRODUCTION
POLICY APPROACH
PUBLIC ATTITUDE
SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT
TRADE-ENVIRONMENT RELATIONS
TRADE-OFF
WATER YIELD
spellingShingle ECONOMIC AND BIOPHYSICAL VIEWS
EVALUATION METHODS
TRADEOFFS
CARBON BUDGET
CONTINGENT VALUATION
ECONOMIC ACTIVITY
ECOSYSTEM SERVICE
ENVIRONMENTAL ECONOMICS
LAND USE PLANNING
NET PRIMARY PRODUCTION
POLICY APPROACH
PUBLIC ATTITUDE
SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT
TRADE-ENVIRONMENT RELATIONS
TRADE-OFF
WATER YIELD
ECONOMIC AND BIOPHYSICAL VIEWS
EVALUATION METHODS
TRADEOFFS
CARBON BUDGET
CONTINGENT VALUATION
ECONOMIC ACTIVITY
ECOSYSTEM SERVICE
ENVIRONMENTAL ECONOMICS
LAND USE PLANNING
NET PRIMARY PRODUCTION
POLICY APPROACH
PUBLIC ATTITUDE
SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT
TRADE-ENVIRONMENT RELATIONS
TRADE-OFF
WATER YIELD
Viglizzo, Ernesto F.
Paruelo, José María
Laterra, Pedro
Jobbágy, Esteban G.
Ecosystem service evaluation to support land - use policy
description Regular economic activity takes into account ecosystem goods and services that are exchanged for money in the market [e.g. food, fibre, water] but normally ignores more intangible ones left away from market transactions [e.g. soil protection, climate regulation, disturbance control, habitat provision], even in cases when they become irreversibly impaired. However, because of the increasing pressure brought by the public opinion, the attempts to assign an economic, yet volatile, valuation to ecosystems assets has multiplied in recent years, and policy communities are increasingly compelled to incorporate them into land use planning initiatives. Based on contributions to this special issue, we discuss how the perspective of ecosystem services can contribute to develop sound land-use policies and planning actions. Beyond valuation, several practical implications emerge from the contributions. A myriad of potential tradeoffs must be analyzed because since the provision of some services can be accompanied by the emergence of unexpected dis-services. For example, carbon accumulation based on increasing net primary production rates may simultaneously cut water yields and, hence, water provision. Various existing mechanisms ranging from state-controlled to market-controlled for rewarding the provision of ecosystem services are analyzed and discussed in terms of their capacity to connect nature to land-use planning.
format Texto
topic_facet ECONOMIC AND BIOPHYSICAL VIEWS
EVALUATION METHODS
TRADEOFFS
CARBON BUDGET
CONTINGENT VALUATION
ECONOMIC ACTIVITY
ECOSYSTEM SERVICE
ENVIRONMENTAL ECONOMICS
LAND USE PLANNING
NET PRIMARY PRODUCTION
POLICY APPROACH
PUBLIC ATTITUDE
SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT
TRADE-ENVIRONMENT RELATIONS
TRADE-OFF
WATER YIELD
author Viglizzo, Ernesto F.
Paruelo, José María
Laterra, Pedro
Jobbágy, Esteban G.
author_facet Viglizzo, Ernesto F.
Paruelo, José María
Laterra, Pedro
Jobbágy, Esteban G.
author_sort Viglizzo, Ernesto F.
title Ecosystem service evaluation to support land - use policy
title_short Ecosystem service evaluation to support land - use policy
title_full Ecosystem service evaluation to support land - use policy
title_fullStr Ecosystem service evaluation to support land - use policy
title_full_unstemmed Ecosystem service evaluation to support land - use policy
title_sort ecosystem service evaluation to support land - use policy
url http://ceiba.agro.uba.ar/cgi-bin/koha/opac-detail.pl?biblionumber=46502
work_keys_str_mv AT viglizzoernestof ecosystemserviceevaluationtosupportlandusepolicy
AT paruelojosemaria ecosystemserviceevaluationtosupportlandusepolicy
AT laterrapedro ecosystemserviceevaluationtosupportlandusepolicy
AT jobbagyestebang ecosystemserviceevaluationtosupportlandusepolicy
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