2015
DOI: 10.1016/j.apgeog.2015.06.009
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Spatio-temporal dynamics of regulating ecosystem services in Europe – The role of past and future land use change

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Cited by 95 publications
(53 citation statements)
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“…As addressed in Section 3, LULC change and land fragmentation measured with landscape metrics helped quantitatively illustrate the spatiotemporal pattern of deteriorated ecosystem services delivery during recent rural-urban transition. Such findings, which dynamically embodied the linkage between ESV cost/benefit supplying and LULC change [11,[57][58][59], can not only be used for retrospective review of previous LULC change and its consequent ecological loss, but be borrowed as baseline for varying land development scenarios. These results can further base scientific soundness for local authorities' decision-making process throughout making regulations, decisions, and policies towards effectively guiding land use and regulating the stakeholders' land development intensity.…”
Section: Implications For Policies Towards Sustainable Land Use and Ementioning
confidence: 99%
“…As addressed in Section 3, LULC change and land fragmentation measured with landscape metrics helped quantitatively illustrate the spatiotemporal pattern of deteriorated ecosystem services delivery during recent rural-urban transition. Such findings, which dynamically embodied the linkage between ESV cost/benefit supplying and LULC change [11,[57][58][59], can not only be used for retrospective review of previous LULC change and its consequent ecological loss, but be borrowed as baseline for varying land development scenarios. These results can further base scientific soundness for local authorities' decision-making process throughout making regulations, decisions, and policies towards effectively guiding land use and regulating the stakeholders' land development intensity.…”
Section: Implications For Policies Towards Sustainable Land Use and Ementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Our analysis contributes to this challenge by quantifying cumulative and individual contributions of climatological drivers to ES change, as well as the spatial structure of other nonclimatological drivers. Only a few studies ) combined both types of drivers in their analysis, while most focused exclusively on climate change (Nelson et al 2013, Scholes 2016 or land use change , Schirpke et al 2013, St€ urck et al 2015, Guerra et al 2016b, Martinez-Harms et al 2017. Therefore, our analysis represents a step forward in tackling the challenge of investigating effects of both climatological and non-climatological drivers on ES.…”
Section: Reliability Of the Analysismentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, the dynamic aspects of ES supply and demand have hardly been considered yet [13]. While in some cases ES providing and benefiting areas overlap, in others they do not.…”
Section: Conceptual Reflection: the Social-ecological Perspectivementioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, up to now there have been very few attempts to quantify ES flows. In addition, temporal dynamics, such as historic and future land use change, can also influence ES supply and demand [13]. Finally, a recent study [31] on marine and coastal ES explores the social and ecological dynamics of ES, called ecosystem service elasticity.…”
Section: Conceptual Reflection: the Social-ecological Perspectivementioning
confidence: 99%