4.5 Article

Environmental Impacts of the Use of Ecosystem Services: Case Study of Birdwatching

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT
Volume 54, Issue 3, Pages 617-630

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00267-014-0317-8

Keywords

Indirect environmental impacts; Sustainable consumption; Reasonable consumption; Rebound effect; Birdwatching; Birding

Funding

  1. Polish National Science Centre grant [N N112 292339]
  2. Polish Ministry of Science and Higher Education

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The main reason for promoting the concept of ecosystem services lies in its potential to contribute to environmental conservation. Highlighting the benefits derived from ecosystems fosters an understanding of humans' dependence on nature, as users of ecosystem services. However, the act of using ecosystem services may not be environmentally neutral. As with the use of products and services generated within an economy, the use of ecosystem services may lead to unintended environmental consequences throughout the 'ecosystem services supply chain.' This article puts forward a framework for analyzing environmental impacts related to the use of ecosystem services, indicating five categories of impact: (1) direct impacts (directly limiting the service's future availability); and four categories of indirect impacts, i.e., on broader ecosystem structures and processes, which can ultimately also affect the initial service: (2) impacts related to managing ecosystems to maximize the delivery of selected services (affecting ecosystems' capacity to provide other services); (3) impacts associated with accessing ecosystems to use their services (affecting other ecosystem components); (4) additional consumption of products, infrastructure or services required to use a selected ecosystem service, and their life-cycle environmental impacts; and (5) broader impacts on the society as a whole (environmental awareness of ecosystem service users and other stakeholders). To test the usefulness of this framework, the article uses the case study of birdwatching, which demonstrates all of the above categories of impacts. The article justifies the need for a broader consideration of environmental impacts related to the use of ecosystem services.

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