Abstract

The economic valuation of ecosystem services in part reflects the desire to use conventional economic tools (markets and economic instruments) to conserve ecosystem services. However, for regulating and supporting ecosystem services that depend on ecosystem structure and function, estimation of economic value requires estimates of the current level of underlying ecological functions first. This primary step is in principle, the job of environmental scientists, not economists. Here, we provide a coarse-level quantitative assessment of the relationship between the research effort expended by environmental scientists (on the biophysical values) and economists (on the monetary values) on 15 different regulating and supporting services in 32 ecosystem types using peer-reviewed article hits retrieved from bibliographic databases as a measure of research effort. We find a positive, moderately strong (r = 0.69) correlation between research efforts in the two domains, a result that, while encouraging, is likely to reflect serendipity rather than the deliberate design of integrated environmental science-economics research programs. Our results suggest that compared to environmental science research effort economic valuation is devoted to a smaller, less diverse set of ecosystem services but a broader, more diverse, set of ecosystem types. The two domains differed more with respect to the ecosystem services that are the major focus of research effort than they did with respect to the ecosystem types of principal research interest. For example, carbon sequestration, erosion regulation, and nutrient cycling receive more relative research effort in the environmental sciences; air quality regulation in economic valuations. For both domains, cultivated areas, wetlands, and urban/semi-urban ecosystem types received relatively large research effort, while arctic and mountain tundra, cave and subterranean, cryosphere, intertidal/littoral zone, and kelp forest ecosystem types received negligible research effort. We suggest ways and means by which the field of sustainability science may be improved by the design and implementation of a searchable database of environmental science and economic valuation literature as well as a global ecosystem service research network and repository that explicitly links research on the estimation and prediction of biophysical ecosystem functions with that of the social sciences and other knowledge systems. These suggestions would, at least in principle, facilitate a more efficient research agenda between economists and environmental scientists and aid management, regulatory and judicial decision-makers.

Highlights

  • People and societies depend on natural or semi-natural ecosystems that provide benefits to support human existence and wellbeing [1,2,3]

  • Our results suggest that compared to environmental science research effort economic valuation is devoted to a smaller, less diverse set of ecosystem services but a broader, more diverse, set of ecosystem types

  • Averaged over the N = 480 ecosystem type × ecosystem service combinations, the number of article hits was far greater in environmental sciences (15.6 ± 40.9 (1 SD) versus 1.2 ± 2.8 (1 SD) for economic valuation)

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Summary

Introduction

People and societies depend on natural or semi-natural ecosystems that provide benefits to support human existence and wellbeing [1,2,3]. ‘Regulating’ (e.g., air quality regulation, climate regulation and carbon sequestration, flood control) and ‘supporting’ (e.g., primary productivity, biogeochemistry, nutrient cycling and provisioning of habitat) ecosystem services can be regarded as classes of ecological processes and functions that demonstrably contribute to human welfare [10, 11]. They “fundamentally underpin biosphere integrity, human safety, and the [delivery] of most other ecosystem services” [12], including ‘provisioning’ ecosystem services (e.g., ‘material’ goods or products: medicinal plants, timber, and other raw materials) and ‘cultural’ ecosystem services (e.g., ‘nonmaterial’ benefits: aesthetic experience, recreation and eco-tourism, sense of place). The production of all ecosystem services depend upon the level of contributing ecosystem processes and functions and any realistic assessment of ecosystem services is contingent on estimates of the level of associated ecological functions

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