确定潮汐湿地恢复的优先生态系统服务

IF 2.4 3区 环境科学与生态学 Q2 ECOLOGY Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution Pub Date : 2024-07-08 DOI:10.3389/fevo.2024.1260447
Chloe A. Jackson, Connie L. Hernandez, Susan H. Yee, Maliha S. Nash, Heida L. Diefenderfer, Amy B. Borde, Matthew C. Harwell, Theodore H. DeWitt
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引用次数: 0

摘要

分类系统是一种重要工具,可用于识别和量化各种关系的重要性、以标准化方式评估空间模式以及预测替代决策方案,从而确定生态系统恢复可带来的潜在效益(如生态系统服务),从而改善人类健康和福祉。我们提出了一种自上而下的方法,系统地利用生态系统服务分类系统来识别与生态系统恢复决策相关的潜在服务。我们使用美国环境保护署的国家生态系统服务分类系统增强版 (NESCS Plus) 演示了这种方法,以识别与潮汐湿地恢复相关的生态系统服务。我们选取了美国大陆三个地区(墨西哥湾北部、大西洋中部和西北太平洋地区)的联邦机构、州机构、湿地保护组织和土地管理者的潮汐湿地管理文件,以研究潮汐湿地恢复活动的潜在效益和可能受益的潜在用户群体在识别上的地区和组织差异。我们使用自动文档分析来量化不同湿地类型在管理文件中被提及的频率,以及其相关受益群体和这些受益人所关心的生态最终产品 (EEP),如 NESCS Plus 所定义。结果显示,在所有三个地区、所有四个组织和所有四种潮汐湿地类型中,最主要的组合是 EEP 自然性与受益人关注(存在)的搭配。总体而言,大西洋中部地区和土地管理组织比其他地区和组织更多提及生态系统服务,而且与其他更具体的潮汐湿地类型相比,EEPs 与潮汐湿地的结合是一个更高层次、更广泛的类别。某些地区和组织的差异在统计学上具有重要意义。这些结果可能有助于确定潮汐湿地恢复的生态系统服务相关目标。这种确定和比较生态系统服务优先级的方法可广泛应用于其它生态系统或决策环境。
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Identifying priority ecosystem services in tidal wetland restoration
Classification systems can be an important tool for identifying and quantifying the importance of relationships, assessing spatial patterns in a standardized way, and forecasting alternative decision scenarios to characterize the potential benefits (e.g., ecosystem services) from ecosystem restoration that improve human health and well-being. We present a top-down approach that systematically leverages ecosystem services classification systems to identify potential services relevant for ecosystem restoration decisions. We demonstrate this approach using the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s National Ecosystem Service Classification System Plus (NESCS Plus) to identify those ecosystem services that are relevant to restoration of tidal wetlands. We selected tidal wetland management documents from federal agencies, state agencies, wetland conservation organizations, and land stewards across three regions of the continental United States (northern Gulf of Mexico, Mid-Atlantic, and Pacific Northwest) to examine regional and organizational differences in identified potential benefits of tidal wetland restoration activities and the potential user groups who may benefit. We used an automated document analysis to quantify the frequencies at which different wetland types were mentioned in the management documents along with their associated beneficiary groups and the ecological end products (EEPs) those beneficiaries care about, as defined by NESCS Plus. Results showed that a top combination across all three regions, all four organizations, and all four tidal wetland types was the EEP naturalness paired with the beneficiary people who care (existence). Overall, the Mid-Atlantic region and the land steward organizations mentioned ecosystem services more than the others, and EEPs were mentioned in combination with tidal wetlands as a high-level, more general category than the other more specific tidal wetland types. Certain regional and organizations differences were statistically significant. Those results may be useful in identifying ecosystem services-related goals for tidal wetland restoration. This approach for identifying and comparing ecosystem service priorities is broadly transferrable to other ecosystems or decision-making contexts.
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来源期刊
Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution
Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution Environmental Science-Ecology
CiteScore
4.00
自引率
6.70%
发文量
1143
审稿时长
12 weeks
期刊介绍: Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution publishes rigorously peer-reviewed research across fundamental and applied sciences, to provide ecological and evolutionary insights into our natural and anthropogenic world, and how it should best be managed. Field Chief Editor Mark A. Elgar at the University of Melbourne is supported by an outstanding Editorial Board of international researchers. This multidisciplinary open-access journal is at the forefront of disseminating and communicating scientific knowledge and impactful discoveries to researchers, academics and the public worldwide. Eminent biologist and theist Theodosius Dobzhansky’s astute observation that “Nothing in biology makes sense except in the light of evolution” has arguably even broader relevance now than when it was first penned in The American Biology Teacher in 1973. One could similarly argue that not much in evolution makes sense without recourse to ecological concepts: understanding diversity — from microbial adaptations to species assemblages — requires insights from both ecological and evolutionary disciplines. Nowadays, technological developments from other fields allow us to address unprecedented ecological and evolutionary questions of astonishing detail, impressive breadth and compelling inference. The specialty sections of Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution will publish, under a single platform, contemporary, rigorous research, reviews, opinions, and commentaries that cover the spectrum of ecological and evolutionary inquiry, both fundamental and applied. Articles are peer-reviewed according to the Frontiers review guidelines, which evaluate manuscripts on objective editorial criteria. Through this unique, Frontiers platform for open-access publishing and research networking, Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution aims to provide colleagues and the broader community with ecological and evolutionary insights into our natural and anthropogenic world, and how it might best be managed.
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