Autores
Robin Naidoo, Andrew Balmford, Robert Costanza, Brendan Fisher, Rhys E Green, Bernhard Lehner, TR Malcolm, Taylor H Ricketts
Fecha de publicación
2008/7/15
Origen
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Volumen
105
Número
28
Páginas
9495-9500
Editor
National Academy of Sciences
Descripción
Global efforts to conserve biodiversity have the potential to deliver economic benefits to people (i.e., “ecosystem services”). However, regions for which conservation benefits both biodiversity and ecosystem services cannot be identified unless ecosystem services can be quantified and valued and their areas of production mapped. Here we review the theory, data, and analyses needed to produce such maps and find that data availability allows us to quantify imperfect global proxies for only four ecosystem services. Using this incomplete set as an illustration, we compare ecosystem service maps with the global distributions of conventional targets for biodiversity conservation. Our preliminary results show that regions selected to maximize biodiversity provide no more ecosystem services than regions chosen randomly. Furthermore, spatial concordance among different services, and between ecosystem services and …
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R Naidoo, A Balmford, R Costanza, B Fisher, RE Green… - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2008