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A review of ecosystem services research in Australia reveals a gap in integrating climate change and impacts on ecosystem services CQU.pdf (1.08 MB)

A review of ecosystem services research in Australia reveals a gap in integrating climate change and impacts on ecosystem services

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Version 2 2022-09-07, 01:01
Version 1 2021-01-18, 13:20
journal contribution
posted on 2022-09-07, 01:01 authored by M Alamgir, PL Pert, Stephen TurtonStephen Turton
Ecosystem services (ES) are the benefits people obtain from ecosystems. A substantial part of human well-being is dependent on the sustainable flow of ES. Climate change, economic growth and an increasing human population has placed greater pressures on global ES. Australias ecosystems are among the most vulnerable sectors to climate change. Hence, a comprehensive review is necessary to explore ES research that integrates climate change impacts. Our review reveals that ES research in Australia, stimulated in the early 2000s, has continued to increase consistently after the Millennium Ecosystem Assessment. Australian ES research has primarily focused on the impact of land-use change and management, policy and governance issues, but less on the impact of climate change on ES. Climate change models show that climate will threaten most of the main ES in Australia by 2050. For the sustainable management of these ES-incorporating climate change-ecosystem and ES specific adaptations are suggested as the best sustainable policy tools for the future. Therefore, further research needs to incorporate climate change and ES for evidence-based sustainable management of Australias ES. We provide the following recommendations for future ES research: (i) evaluating the extent and trend of climate change impacts on ES through consideration of different climate change scenarios; (ii) preparing vulnerability maps of important ES that are likely to be sensitive to climate change and (iii) developing ecosystem and ES specific adaptations to climate change that involve key stakeholders. © 2014 Taylor and Francis.

Funding

Category 2 - Other Public Sector Grants Category

History

Volume

10

Issue

2

Start Page

112

End Page

127

Number of Pages

16

eISSN

2151-3740

ISSN

2151-3732

Publisher

Taylor & Francis, UK

Additional Rights

CC BY Ecosystems and People is a fully open access journal. This means all submitted articles will, if accepted, be available for anyone to read, anywhere, at any time, immediately on publication. Authors of articles published in Ecosystems and People retain the copyright to their articles and provide Taylor & Francis with the non-exclusive right to publish the Version of Record under a creative commons license. If you are not able to act as copyright holder, please get in touch.

Peer Reviewed

  • Yes

Open Access

  • Yes

External Author Affiliations

James Cook University

Era Eligible

  • Yes

Journal

International Journal of Biodiversity Science, Ecosystem Services and Management