Abstract

ABSTRACTThe ecosystem service framework is now well accepted for focussing management strategies to preserve and restore ecosystems. Its implementation remains challenging, however, due to the environment’s complexity and dynamics that interfere with ecosystems’ ability to provide the services. Here, we question whether we can show where and how to intervene in riparian corridors to restore specific ecosystem services without endangering others. Specific hypotheses in this context are for the spatial aggregation of ecosystem services delivered by riparian corridors with respect to naturalness (1), to the existence of bundles of ecosystem services (2), and finally for the scale sensitivity of this congruence (3). Within a Geographical Information System framework, we analyse the capacity of riparian corridors to provide ecosystem services over three river basins in the Bresse region (France) based on high-resolution data of the riparian corridor hydromorphology and land use. Specifically, we compare the capacity to provide two services: in-stream water purification and riparian retention of nutrients that are critical goals for river management and rehabilitation strategies. We observe little spatial association and high spatial variability for the two emphasized ecosystem services. Surprisingly, no congruence of ecosystem services with riparian corridor naturalness is present. The absence of associations between ecosystem services and their spatial variability will oblige environmental managers to identify underpinning environmental processes and patterns at local scales. In conclusion, we plead for fine-grained multifunctional assessment of ecosystems’ capacity to deliver services, especially in environments such as river corridors that exhibit high environmental heterogeneity.EDITED BY Neville Crossman

Highlights

  • The overall frameworks to assess ecosystems’ capacities to provide services are well accepted and expected to deliver operational measures for management strategies and planning (Haines-Young and Potschin 2010; Lautenbach et al 2012; Allan et al 2013)

  • Within a Geographical Information System (GIS) framework, we examine ES delivered by riparian corridors over three river basins in one geographic region – namely the Bresse region of France

  • Where some studies on ecological restoration indicate synergies between multiple ecosystem services (Jiang et al 2016), here we find no real support to the strong spatial aggregation presumed in the ES bundles concept (Raudsepp-Hearne et al 2010)

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Summary

Introduction

The overall frameworks to assess ecosystems’ capacities to provide services are well accepted and expected to deliver operational measures for management strategies and planning (Haines-Young and Potschin 2010; Lautenbach et al 2012; Allan et al 2013). The supply of multiple functions and services in these frameworks is seen as a valuable asset for management strategies It was strongly embraced as a framework to reconcile societal and ecological demands and visions, in an assumed harmony of services delivered, for planners and managers to ‘cherry-pick’. Most operational ecosystem service assessments undertaken (Burkhard et al 2010; De Groot et al 2010; Paetzold et al 2010; Pinto et al 2010) elaborated a comprehensive work to appraise a status at a specific point in time Up to now, these assessments pay little attention to the spatial and temporal dynamics of the ecosystems. This flow context and network structuring of river basins has not yet been investigated with respect to the delivery of ecosystem services

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