Ecosystem services in conservation planning: Targeted benefits vs. co-benefits or costs?
Submitted by susan on Fri, 2011-09-09 16:39
There is growing support for characterizing ecosystem services in order to link conservation and human well-being. However, few studies have explicitly included ecosystem services within systematic conservation planning, and those that have follow two fundamentally different approaches: ecosystem services as intrinsically-important targeted benefits vs. substitutable co-benefits. We present a first comparison of these two approaches in a case study in the Central Interior of British Columbia. We calculated and mapped economic values for carbon storage, timber production, and recreational angling using a geographical information system (GIS).
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http://www.plosone.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal.pone.0024378
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Publication Date:
06/09/2011