Abstract

The ecosystem services approach is increasingly applied in the context of environmental resources management and impact assessment. Assessments often involve analysis of alternative scenarios for which potential changes in ecosystem services are quantified. For such assessments to be effective there is a requirement to represent changes in ecosystem services supply in a clear and informative manner. Here we compute Ecosystem Services Ratio (ESR), a simple index that quantifies the relative change in ecosystem service provision under altered conditions given the baseline, and the Modified Ecosystem Services State Index, which averages the ESR scores obtained for each ecosystem service assessed, to provide an overall measure of the change. Given that modelling approaches to quantification of ecosystem services often result in production of maps of ecosystem supply, the proposed metrics can be visualized as maps in support to decision making processes. We use these indices to investigate potential changes in the supply of seven modelled ecosystem services resulting from the introduction of a major road development – a highway with associated green infrastructure – into a predominantly agricultural landscape in the UK. We find that the planted woodland, scrubland and grassland can increase the supply of multiple ecosystem services not accounted for in previous green infrastructure studies, although the magnitude of change differs with the type of vegetation, initial conditions and timeframes of the assessment.

Highlights

  • The concept of ecosystem services, generally defined as the benefits that humans obtain from nature (Millennium Ecosystem Assessment, 2005), has introduced a new dimension to the environmental discourse, that of natural capital

  • All ecosystem services assessed in this study were affected, sediment retention was characterized with high Ecosystem Services Ratio (ESR) when it was calculated on the gridby-grid basis first and subsequently averaged over the study area

  • We presented a study of changes in the supply of seven ecosystem services belonging to the provisioning, regulating and supporting categories quantified from the outcomes of spatially explicit ecosystem services models with the use of two simple metrics

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Summary

Introduction

The concept of ecosystem services, generally defined as the benefits that humans obtain from nature (Millennium Ecosystem Assessment, 2005), has introduced a new dimension to the environmental discourse, that of natural capital. Ment to maximize the flow of ecosystem services from the affected area This offers progress towards integrating “grey-green-blue” infrastructure on an equal footing, recognizing the constraints and opportunities for investment aimed at optimizing the outcome of the development, with net gains in natural capital. Baker et al (2013) recognized strengths of the ecosystem services approach as applied ex-post to several EIA case studies These included better integration of particular topics of the assessment via consideration of ecosystem services bundles allowing for identification of synergies and tradeoffs between ecosystem services at various spatial and temporal scales (Raudsepp-Hearne et al, 2010; Rodríguez et al, 2006), and the framing of the entire assessment in a more tangible way for stakeholders and decision makers by treating the environment as a source of benefits towards social and economic goals

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