Handbook of Ecological and Ecosystem Engineering. Группа авторов

Чтение книги онлайн.

Читать онлайн книгу Handbook of Ecological and Ecosystem Engineering - Группа авторов страница 17

Handbook of Ecological and Ecosystem Engineering - Группа авторов

Скачать книгу

of ecotechnology and environmental management. Ecosystems and geographical edges. Ecosystems are most vulnerable at the geographical edges; therefore, ecological management should take advantage of ecosystems and their biota in their optimal geographical range. Ecosystem hierarchy. Ecosystems are hierarchical systems, and all the components forming the various levels of the hierarchy make up a structure that is important for ecosystem functioning.

      Close your eyes, prick your ears, and from the softest sound to the wildest noise, from the simplest tone to the highest harmony, from the most violent, passionate scream to the gentlest words of sweet reason, it is by Nature who speaks, revealing her being, her power, her life, and her relatedness so that a blind person, to whom the infinitely visible world is denied, can grasp an infinite vitality in what can be heard.

       Johann Wolfgang von Goethe

      Ancient thinkers emphasized the first concepts of services provided by Nature to human beings, nurturing what we today call provision services and enjoying sounds, auras, and odors that nurture body and soul. The book On Airs, Waters and Places by Hippocrates (460–370 BCE) – a Greek philosopher considered the father of medicine in the Western world – correlates the environment to different nosological frameworks and population features and includes aspects of daily activities and environmental effects on individuals' health in its analysis.

      Services provided by ecosystems to human beings have been described in mythological, philosophical, scientific, and poetic texts. However, it was naturalist and geographer Alexander von Humboldt who bequeathed us our current vision of Nature. Humboldt – who was influenced by the poet Goethe, the philosopher Kant, English romantic writers, and American transcendentalists – offered the idea that Nature exists only insofar as we perceive it within us; according to him, the outer world, ideas, and feelings were associated with each other, so he wrote: “Nature must be known through feelings” [13]. In addition, Humboldt sought to unravel God's designs through Nature.

      Alexander von Humboldt's vision was lost over time; however, it was recovered from the 1970s onwards primarily due to the academic elaboration of the concept of Nature services by botanist Walter Westman. Certainly our current vision of services provided by ecosystems has deep roots stemming from Humboldt's contribution, such as the concept of cultural, leisure, and religious services, which play a fundamental role in nourishing the immaterial dimension of human beings.

      When Walter Westman formulated the concept of Nature services, he pointed out that benefits deriving from ecosystems should be listed to increase public interest in biodiversity conservation and ensure that decisions are made based on robust information. Later, in 1981, Paul and Anne Ehrlich [14] suggested the term ecosystem services, which is used today.

      Several definitions of ecosystem services are available in the literature. MEA, for example, has defined ecosystem services as the benefits humanity gets from ecosystems [16], whereas Constanza et al. [1] defined them as the direct and indirect human benefits resulting from ecosystem functions. Thus, functions are biophysical ecosystem features essential to their own functioning, and services are the product of two or more ecosystem functions; a single ecosystem function can contribute to two or more ecosystem services.

Graph depicts articles, reviews, and books published on ecosystem services.

      Source: Data from 1984 to 2019, Scopus 2020.

Graph depicts articles, reviews, and books published on ecosystem services by country or territory.

      Source: Data from 1984 to 2019, Scopus 2020.

Pie chart depicts the articles, reviews, and books published on ecosystem services by area.

      Source: Data from 1984 to 2019, Scopus 2020.

      Supporters of the concept of ecosystem services refute the critics and explain that this concept goes beyond its anthropocentric nature and instrumental values since it leads to the interest of actors involved in biodiversity conservation and encourages the reconnection, complementarity, and ethical commitment of individuals and society to ecosystems. In addition, the inaccuracy of definitions and classifications improves transdisciplinary collaboration; most environmental services are not linked to the market.

      Despite the arguments for and counterarguments against the concept of ecosystem services, it has evolved over the last 30 years from a general heuristic model that highlights the importance of Nature for human wellbeing to a model that highlights how the appropriation of specific ecological structures or processes affects human wellbeing [22]. However, it is important to understand how ecosystems benefit other ecosystems that end up directly or indirectly influencing humanity.

      1.3.1

Скачать книгу