2013
DOI: 10.3390/resources2030213
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Valuing Ecosystem Services for Coastal Wetland Protection and Restoration: Progress and Challenges

Abstract: Abstract:Coastal wetlands, such as marshes, mangroves and forested swamps, are in decline globally. Although considerable progress has been made in quantifying and valuing some of the key ecosystem goods and services provided by these habitats, fundamental challenges remain. The biggest challenge is inadequate knowledge to link changes in ecosystem structure and function to the production of valuable goods and services. Another problem is that very few ecosystem services are marketed. This review discusses rec… Show more

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Cited by 156 publications
(96 citation statements)
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References 40 publications
(71 reference statements)
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“…Boyd (2010) issued a call for this immediately after the DWH spill occurred, and this theme was expanded upon greatly in the 2013 report issued by the National Academies (Committee on the Effects of the Deepwater Horizon Mississippi Canyon-252 Oil Spill on Ecosystem Services in the Gulf of Mexico), which was influenced heavily by Barbier (2011a). Scarlett and Boyd (2011) expanded the call for ecosystem services valuation to existing federal regulations and programs and Barbier (2013) targeted the call to wetland protection and restoration. These follow on the heels of a growing number of calls for increased use of an ecosystems-based approach to resource management (Bagstad et al 2012 The ecosystem services approach differs from traditional valuation approaches in that it focuses not on the value of the resource itself, but on the value of the benefits --the goods and services --it provides.…”
Section: Emerging Research Direction: Ecosystem Services Valuationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Boyd (2010) issued a call for this immediately after the DWH spill occurred, and this theme was expanded upon greatly in the 2013 report issued by the National Academies (Committee on the Effects of the Deepwater Horizon Mississippi Canyon-252 Oil Spill on Ecosystem Services in the Gulf of Mexico), which was influenced heavily by Barbier (2011a). Scarlett and Boyd (2011) expanded the call for ecosystem services valuation to existing federal regulations and programs and Barbier (2013) targeted the call to wetland protection and restoration. These follow on the heels of a growing number of calls for increased use of an ecosystems-based approach to resource management (Bagstad et al 2012 The ecosystem services approach differs from traditional valuation approaches in that it focuses not on the value of the resource itself, but on the value of the benefits --the goods and services --it provides.…”
Section: Emerging Research Direction: Ecosystem Services Valuationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For estuarine and coastal ecosystems, there are already 80 valuation estimates from all over the world for storm protection, erosion control, water purification and supply, carbon sequestration, recreation and maintenance of fishing, hunting and foraging activities -and the list is growing 4 .…”
Section: Counting the Costmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Table 3 shows an overview of these techniques including their attributed CES and goods adapted from [2,16,24,[30][31][32]. Table 3.…”
Section: Valuation Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…CZ have always been popular due to their accessibility to resources, in particular due to the abundant supply of subsistence resources, and recreational and cultural activities [1]. While coastal areas cover only 4% of the earth's total land area and are equivalent to only 11% of the World's ocean area [2], they host one third of the World's population and are twice as densely populated as inland areas [3]. The population density grows in the CZ annually due to migration driven by global demographic and socio-economic changes [1].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%