This letter is in response to an article by Ken Wallace titled “Classifications of ecosystem services: problems and solutions” (Biological Conservation 139, 2007). This letter discusses the points we see as problematic with Wallace’s framework and sets out our conceptualization of linking ecosystem services with human welfare. In this letter we suggest that utilizing the terms intermediate services, final services and benefits should go a long way to clearing up much of the ambiguity in ecosystem services typologies, especially for economic valuation purposes. As Wallace points out, clearly defining and organizing the concept of ecosystem services is not just a semantic decision, but it is integral to operationalizing something that can cle...
The ecosystem services framework (ESF) is advantageous and widely used for itemising and quantifying...
Ecosystem services research faces several challenges stemming from the plurality of interpretations ...
The ways in which economists value natural resources has been, and continues to be, a constantly evo...
Linking biophysical aspects of ecosystems with human benefits through the notion of ecosystem servic...
Ecosystem service approaches have become a prominent basis for planning and management. Cultural ser...
The ecosystem services are material base and natural capital for sustainable development of human be...
As the processes by which nature renders benefits for people, ecosystem services are fundamental to ...
The value of the services provided top human societies by natural ecosystems and biogeochemical cycl...
The transition to sustainable development requires to pay more attention to the quality of life, peo...
Although there has been much writing about ecosystem services in the last decade, there has been ins...
There is a growing public interest in the role and value of natural ecosystems and how they contribu...
The literature on ecosystem service valuation has grown considerably in the past decade as nations a...
The concern for damage to nature has led to the emergence of a set of techniques for ecosystem servi...
The concept of ecosystems services provides a robust and complementary rationale for biodiversity co...
Mounting evidence indicates that every ecosystem on the planet is showing signs of deterioration and...
The ecosystem services framework (ESF) is advantageous and widely used for itemising and quantifying...
Ecosystem services research faces several challenges stemming from the plurality of interpretations ...
The ways in which economists value natural resources has been, and continues to be, a constantly evo...
Linking biophysical aspects of ecosystems with human benefits through the notion of ecosystem servic...
Ecosystem service approaches have become a prominent basis for planning and management. Cultural ser...
The ecosystem services are material base and natural capital for sustainable development of human be...
As the processes by which nature renders benefits for people, ecosystem services are fundamental to ...
The value of the services provided top human societies by natural ecosystems and biogeochemical cycl...
The transition to sustainable development requires to pay more attention to the quality of life, peo...
Although there has been much writing about ecosystem services in the last decade, there has been ins...
There is a growing public interest in the role and value of natural ecosystems and how they contribu...
The literature on ecosystem service valuation has grown considerably in the past decade as nations a...
The concern for damage to nature has led to the emergence of a set of techniques for ecosystem servi...
The concept of ecosystems services provides a robust and complementary rationale for biodiversity co...
Mounting evidence indicates that every ecosystem on the planet is showing signs of deterioration and...
The ecosystem services framework (ESF) is advantageous and widely used for itemising and quantifying...
Ecosystem services research faces several challenges stemming from the plurality of interpretations ...
The ways in which economists value natural resources has been, and continues to be, a constantly evo...