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Author Daily, Gretchen C.
Title Ecosystem services : benefits supplied to human societies by natural ecosystems [computer file] / Gretchen C. Daily, Susan Alexander, Paul R. Ehrlich, Larry Goulder, Jane Lubchenco, Pamela A. Matson, Harold A. Mooney, Sandra Postel, Stephen H. Schneider, David Tillman and George M. Woodwell.
Imprint Washington, DC : The Ecological Society of America , 1997
Edition Electronic version
Computer data
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Details

Descript 18p. : col. ports
ISSN 1092-8987
Note Taken from: Issues in Ecology, No. 2, Spring 1997.
System Det System requirements: World Wide Web
Note Description based on: Aug 31, 2015 viewing.
Human societies derive many essential goods from natural ecosystems, including seafood, game animals, fodder, fuelwood, timber, and pharmaceutical products. These goods represent important and familiar parts of the economy. What has been less appreciated until recently is that natural ecosystems also perform fundamental life-support services without which human civilizations would cease to thrive. These include the purification of air and water, detoxification and decomposition of wastes, regulation of climate, regeneration of soil fertility, and production and maintenance of biodiversity, from which key ingredients of our agricultural, pharmaceutical, and industrial enterprises are derived. This array of services is generated by a complex interplay of natural cycles powered by solar energy and operating across a wide range of space and time scales. The process of waste disposal, for example, involves the life cycles of bacteria as well as the planet-wide cycles of major chemical elements such as carbon and nitrogen. Such processes are worth many trillions of dollars annually. Yet because most of these benefits are not traded in economic markets, they carry no price tags that could alert society to changes in their supply or deterioration of underlying ecological systems that generate them. Because threats to these systems are increasing, there is a critical need for identification and monitoring of ecosystem services both locally and globally, and for the incorporation of their value into decision-making processes...
Subject Ecosystems.
Add Author Alexander, Susan.
Ehrlich, Paul R.
Goulder, Larry,
Lubchenco, Jane.
Matson, Pamela A.
Mooney, Harold A.
Postel, Sandra.
Schneider, Stephen H.
Tillman, David.
Woodwell, George M.