Nature's Services: Societal Dependence On Natural Ecosystems
edited by Gretchen Cara Daily contributions by Kalen Lagerquist, Larry Goulder, Pamela A. Matson, Harold A. Mooney, Rosamond Naylor, Peter Vitousek, John Harte, Stephen H. Schneider, Stephen L. Buchmann, Sandra Postel, Kamaljit Bawa, Les Kaufman, Charles H. Peterson, Stephen Carpenter, David Tillman, Paul Dayton and Susan Alexander foreword by John Peterson Myers and Joshua Reichert
Island Press, 1997 Paper: 978-1-55963-476-2 | Cloth: 978-1-55963-475-5 | eISBN: 978-1-59726-775-5 Library of Congress Classification GF75.N37 1997 Dewey Decimal Classification 304.2
ABOUT THIS BOOK | AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY | REVIEWS | TOC | REQUEST ACCESSIBLE FILE
ABOUT THIS BOOK
Life itself as well as the entire human economy depends on goods and services provided by earth's natural systems. The processes of cleansing, recycling, and renewal, along with goods such as seafood, forage, and timber, are worth many trillions of dollars annually, and nothing could live without them. Yet growing human impacts on the environment are profoundly disrupting the functioning of natural systems and imperiling the delivery of these services.
Nature's Services brings together world-renowned scientists from a variety of disciplines to examine the character and value of ecosystem services, the damage that has been done to them, and the consequent implications for human society. Contributors including Paul R. Ehrlich, Donald Kennedy, Pamela A. Matson, Robert Costanza, Gary Paul Nabhan, Jane Lubchenco, Sandra Postel, and Norman Myers present a detailed synthesis of our current understanding of a suite of ecosystem services and a preliminary assessment of their economic value. Chapters consider:
major services including climate regulation, soil fertility, pollination, and pest control
philosophical and economic issues of valuation
case studies of specific ecosystems and services
implication of recent findings and steps that must be taken to address the most pressing concerns
Nature's Services represents one of the first efforts by scientists to provide an overview of the many benefits and services that nature offers to people and the extent to which we are all vitally dependent on those services. The book enhances our understanding of the value of the natural systems that surround us and can play an essential role in encouraging greater efforts to protect the earth's basic life-support systems before it is too late.
AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY Gretchen C. Daily is Associate Professor at Stanford University. A Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, she is the author of many articles and editor of one of the most widely cited publications in modern environmental science, Nature’s Services (Island Press).
Daily, an ecologist whose work ranges from conservation science to environmental policy analysis to public outreach, is one of three founders of the Natural Capital Project and serves as its chief emissary to financial and government leaders. She is working to develop a scientific basis -- and political and institutional support -- for managing Earth's life-support systems. Daily has published more than 150 scientific and popular articles. Her most recent book is The New Economy of Nature: The Quest to Make Conservation Profitable, co-authored with journalist Katherine Ellison (2002, Island Press). She serves on the boards of The Nature Conservancy and the Beijer International Institute for Ecological Economics, and at Stanford she is Director of the Center for Conservation Biology.
REVIEWS
"...the authors define ecosystem services, summarize historical perspectives, offer means of monetary valuation, and present some specific categories of damage.... [This] volume performs a highly valuable service, alerting readers in economic terms of the ultimately genocidal shortsightedness of abusing global biosphere."
— Environment
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Preface
Chapter 1. Perspectives on Nature's Services
Chapter 2. Ecosystem Services: A Fragmentary History
-Conclusion
-References
PART I. Economic Issues of Valuation
Chapter 3. Valuing Ecosystem Services: Philosophical Bases and Empirical Methods
Chapter 4. Valuing Ecosystem Services With Efficiency, Fairness, and Sustainability as Goals
PART II. Overarching Services
Chapter 5. The Interaction of Climate And Life
Chapter 6. Biodiversity and Ecosystem Functioning
Chapter 7. Ecosystem Services Supplied by Soil
Chapter 8. Services Provided by Pollinators
Chapter 9. Natural Pest Control Services and Agriculture
PART III. Services Supplied by Major Biomes
Chapter 10. Marine Ecosystem Services
Chapter 11. Freshwater Ecosystem Services
Chapter 12. The World's Forests and Their Ecosystem Services
Chapter 13. Ecosystem Services in Grasslands
PART IV. Case Studies
Chapter 14. Biodiversity's Genetic Library
Chapter 15. Impacts of Marine Resource Extraction on Ecosystem Services and Sustainability
Chapter 16. Ecosystem Services in Subsistence Economies and Conservation of Biodiversity
Chapter 17. Ecosystem Services in a Modern Economy: Gunnison County, Colorado
Chapter 18. Water Quality Improvement by Wetlands
Chapter 19. Services Supplied by South African Fynbos Ecosystems
PART V. Conclusion
Chapter 20. Valuing and Safeguarding Earth's Life-Support Systems
Index
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Nature's Services: Societal Dependence On Natural Ecosystems
edited by Gretchen Cara Daily contributions by Kalen Lagerquist, Larry Goulder, Pamela A. Matson, Harold A. Mooney, Rosamond Naylor, Peter Vitousek, John Harte, Stephen H. Schneider, Stephen L. Buchmann, Sandra Postel, Kamaljit Bawa, Les Kaufman, Charles H. Peterson, Stephen Carpenter, David Tillman, Paul Dayton and Susan Alexander foreword by John Peterson Myers and Joshua Reichert
Island Press, 1997 Paper: 978-1-55963-476-2 Cloth: 978-1-55963-475-5 eISBN: 978-1-59726-775-5
Life itself as well as the entire human economy depends on goods and services provided by earth's natural systems. The processes of cleansing, recycling, and renewal, along with goods such as seafood, forage, and timber, are worth many trillions of dollars annually, and nothing could live without them. Yet growing human impacts on the environment are profoundly disrupting the functioning of natural systems and imperiling the delivery of these services.
Nature's Services brings together world-renowned scientists from a variety of disciplines to examine the character and value of ecosystem services, the damage that has been done to them, and the consequent implications for human society. Contributors including Paul R. Ehrlich, Donald Kennedy, Pamela A. Matson, Robert Costanza, Gary Paul Nabhan, Jane Lubchenco, Sandra Postel, and Norman Myers present a detailed synthesis of our current understanding of a suite of ecosystem services and a preliminary assessment of their economic value. Chapters consider:
major services including climate regulation, soil fertility, pollination, and pest control
philosophical and economic issues of valuation
case studies of specific ecosystems and services
implication of recent findings and steps that must be taken to address the most pressing concerns
Nature's Services represents one of the first efforts by scientists to provide an overview of the many benefits and services that nature offers to people and the extent to which we are all vitally dependent on those services. The book enhances our understanding of the value of the natural systems that surround us and can play an essential role in encouraging greater efforts to protect the earth's basic life-support systems before it is too late.
AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY Gretchen C. Daily is Associate Professor at Stanford University. A Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, she is the author of many articles and editor of one of the most widely cited publications in modern environmental science, Nature’s Services (Island Press).
Daily, an ecologist whose work ranges from conservation science to environmental policy analysis to public outreach, is one of three founders of the Natural Capital Project and serves as its chief emissary to financial and government leaders. She is working to develop a scientific basis -- and political and institutional support -- for managing Earth's life-support systems. Daily has published more than 150 scientific and popular articles. Her most recent book is The New Economy of Nature: The Quest to Make Conservation Profitable, co-authored with journalist Katherine Ellison (2002, Island Press). She serves on the boards of The Nature Conservancy and the Beijer International Institute for Ecological Economics, and at Stanford she is Director of the Center for Conservation Biology.
REVIEWS
"...the authors define ecosystem services, summarize historical perspectives, offer means of monetary valuation, and present some specific categories of damage.... [This] volume performs a highly valuable service, alerting readers in economic terms of the ultimately genocidal shortsightedness of abusing global biosphere."
— Environment
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Preface
Chapter 1. Perspectives on Nature's Services
Chapter 2. Ecosystem Services: A Fragmentary History
-Conclusion
-References
PART I. Economic Issues of Valuation
Chapter 3. Valuing Ecosystem Services: Philosophical Bases and Empirical Methods
Chapter 4. Valuing Ecosystem Services With Efficiency, Fairness, and Sustainability as Goals
PART II. Overarching Services
Chapter 5. The Interaction of Climate And Life
Chapter 6. Biodiversity and Ecosystem Functioning
Chapter 7. Ecosystem Services Supplied by Soil
Chapter 8. Services Provided by Pollinators
Chapter 9. Natural Pest Control Services and Agriculture
PART III. Services Supplied by Major Biomes
Chapter 10. Marine Ecosystem Services
Chapter 11. Freshwater Ecosystem Services
Chapter 12. The World's Forests and Their Ecosystem Services
Chapter 13. Ecosystem Services in Grasslands
PART IV. Case Studies
Chapter 14. Biodiversity's Genetic Library
Chapter 15. Impacts of Marine Resource Extraction on Ecosystem Services and Sustainability
Chapter 16. Ecosystem Services in Subsistence Economies and Conservation of Biodiversity
Chapter 17. Ecosystem Services in a Modern Economy: Gunnison County, Colorado
Chapter 18. Water Quality Improvement by Wetlands
Chapter 19. Services Supplied by South African Fynbos Ecosystems
PART V. Conclusion
Chapter 20. Valuing and Safeguarding Earth's Life-Support Systems
Index
REQUEST ACCESSIBLE FILE
If you are a student who cannot use this book in printed form, BiblioVault may be able to supply you
with an electronic file for alternative access.
Please have the accessibility coordinator at your school fill out this form.
It can take 2-3 weeks for requests to be filled.
ABOUT THIS BOOK | AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY | REVIEWS | TOC | REQUEST ACCESSIBLE FILE