Coastal ecosystems support the livelihoods and wellbeing of millions of people worldwide. However, the marine and terrestrial ecosystem services that coastal ecosystems provide are particularly vulnerable to global environmental change, as are the coastal communities who directly depend on them. To navigate these changes and ensure the wellbeing of coastal communities, policy-makers must know which coastal ecosystem services matter to whom, and why. Yet, in developing coastal settings, capturing people's perceptions of the importance of ecosystem services is challenging for several reasons. Firstly, coastal ecosystem services encompass both terrestrial and marine services across multiple categories (i.e. provisioning, supporting, and cultur...
Coastal ecosystems provide services from which humans benefit and find value in their consumption. B...
Ecosystem services (ES) are heralded as an approach that communicates across disciplines and between...
Understanding ecosystem service change necessitates an understanding of the social and ecological di...
Coastal ecosystems support the livelihoods and wellbeing of millions of people worldwide. However, t...
Much ecosystem service (ES) research is structured around four often implicit assumptions about ES, ...
Coastal areas are especially important to human well-being with half the world's population living w...
Natural ecosystems hold great place within the hearts and lives of people, particularly those within...
Coastal areas are especially important to human well-being with half the world's population living w...
Cultural ecosystem services (CES) reflect peoples’ physical and cognitive interactions with nature a...
Ecosystem services have become a dominant paradigm for understanding how people derive well-being fr...
Cultural ecosystem services (CES) reflect peoples' physical and cognitive interactions with nature a...
Ecosystem services support the livelihoods and wellbeing of millions of people in developing countri...
Environmental and natural resource management in Australia occurs at a regional scale with many init...
Humans have changed the climate, lands and seas, forests and coasts, in ways that may destabilize ea...
The natural conservation of coastal lagoons is important not only for their ecological importance, b...
Coastal ecosystems provide services from which humans benefit and find value in their consumption. B...
Ecosystem services (ES) are heralded as an approach that communicates across disciplines and between...
Understanding ecosystem service change necessitates an understanding of the social and ecological di...
Coastal ecosystems support the livelihoods and wellbeing of millions of people worldwide. However, t...
Much ecosystem service (ES) research is structured around four often implicit assumptions about ES, ...
Coastal areas are especially important to human well-being with half the world's population living w...
Natural ecosystems hold great place within the hearts and lives of people, particularly those within...
Coastal areas are especially important to human well-being with half the world's population living w...
Cultural ecosystem services (CES) reflect peoples’ physical and cognitive interactions with nature a...
Ecosystem services have become a dominant paradigm for understanding how people derive well-being fr...
Cultural ecosystem services (CES) reflect peoples' physical and cognitive interactions with nature a...
Ecosystem services support the livelihoods and wellbeing of millions of people in developing countri...
Environmental and natural resource management in Australia occurs at a regional scale with many init...
Humans have changed the climate, lands and seas, forests and coasts, in ways that may destabilize ea...
The natural conservation of coastal lagoons is important not only for their ecological importance, b...
Coastal ecosystems provide services from which humans benefit and find value in their consumption. B...
Ecosystem services (ES) are heralded as an approach that communicates across disciplines and between...
Understanding ecosystem service change necessitates an understanding of the social and ecological di...