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Spatial patterns and environmental constraints on ecosystem services at a catchment scale
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Spatial patterns and environmental constraints on ecosystem services at a catchment scale

Bridget A. Emmett, David Cooper, Simon Smart, Bethanna Jackson, Amy Thomas, Bernard Cosby, Chris Evans, Helen Glanville, James E. McDonald, Shelagh K. Malham, …
The Science of the total environment, Vol.572, pp.1586-1600
2016
PMID: 27156120

Abstract

Biodiversity Carbon Macronutrients Productivity Soil pH Water quality
Improved understanding and prediction of the fundamental environmental controls on ecosystem service supply across the landscape will help to inform decisions made by policy makers and land-water managers. To evaluate this issue for a local catchment case study, we explored metrics and spatial patterns of service supply for water quality regulation, agriculture production, carbon storage, and biodiversity for the Macronutrient Conwy catchment. Methods included using ecosystem models such as LUCI and JULES, integration of national scale field survey datasets, earth observation products and plant trait databases, to produce finely resolved maps of species richness and primary production. Analyses were done with both 1×1km gridded and subcatchment data. A common single gradient characterised catchment scale ecosystem services supply with agricultural production and carbon storage at opposing ends of the gradient as reported for a national-scale assessment. Species diversity was positively related to production due to the below national average productivity levels in the Conwy combined with the unimodal relationship between biodiversity and productivity at the national scale. In contrast to the national scale assessment, a strong reduction in water quality as production increased was observed in these low productive systems. Various soil variables were tested for their predictive power of ecosystem service supply. Soil carbon, nitrogen, their ratio and soil pH all had double the power of rainfall and altitude, each explaining around 45% of variation but soil pH is proposed as a potential metric for ecosystem service supply potential as it is a simple and practical metric which can be carried out in the field with crowd-sourcing technologies now available. The study emphasises the importance of considering multiple ecosystem services together due to the complexity of covariation at local and national scales, and the benefits of exploiting a wide range of metrics for each service to enhance data robustness. [Display omitted] •Production and carbon storage define an ecosystem service supply gradient.•Use of multiple metrics increases robustness of ecosystem service supply assessment.•Service supply relationships are similar whether assessed by grid or subcatchment.•Macronutrients have double the predictive power of climate for service supply.•Soil pH is a simple and practical predictive indicator of ecosystem service supply.

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UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)

This output has contributed to the advancement of the following goals:

#2 Zero Hunger
#6 Clean Water and Sanitation
#11 Sustainable Cities and Communities
#13 Climate Action
#14 Life Below Water
#15 Life on Land

Source: InCites

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InCites Highlights

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Collaboration types
Domestic collaboration
International collaboration
Citation topics
3 Agriculture, Environment & Ecology
3.40 Forestry
3.40.635 Ecosystem Services
Web Of Science research areas
Environmental Sciences
ESI research areas
Environment/Ecology
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