Abstract

The study of ecosystem services requires the integration of different observational points. This is particularly true in Water, as this element continuously cycles, increasing chances of interaction among services originating in different ecosystems. However, aquatic scientists historically approached the study of inland/freshwater and open/marine waters in different ways and this cultural division potentially hampers integrative approaches. Herein, we explored the literature pertaining to ecosystem services across the last 23 years, analysing 4,590 aquatic papers. By aggregating and intersecting topics included in this papers’ collection using text-mining and topical network approaches, we saw that the study of local environmental conditions (e.g., river estuary management) and synergies and trade-offs between services (e.g., carbon sequestration and water purification) can display several potential conceptual links between freshwater and marine sciences. Our analyses suggest that to intersect ecosystem services across the aquatic continuum, the conceptual integration between marine and freshwater science must be reinforced, especially at the interface between different “salinity realms.” Such integration should adopt a “system thinking” perspective, in which the focus is on multiple socio-ecological processes giving rise to interactions that are (i) biologically mediated, (ii) potentially conflicting, and (iii) entangled within networks.

Highlights

  • Covering 70% of Earth’s surface, Water is the foundation for our life, health, and wealth

  • Ecosystem services (ES) have been defined as the multiple and diverse benefits to humans provided by healthy environments, and they were initially categorised into four groups

  • We explored peer-reviewed papers published throughout 23 years, from January 1997 to June 2020, by employing an informatic approach to aggregate and synthesise the scientific information

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Summary

Introduction

Covering 70% of Earth’s surface, Water is the foundation for our life, health, and wealth.

Results
Conclusion
Full Text
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