Mason Adam R, Gathorne-Hardy Alfred, White Chris, Plancherel Yves, Woods Jem, Myers Rupert J
Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering Imperial College London London UK.
Global Academy of Agriculture and Food Security The University of Edinburgh Midlothian UK.
Ecol Evol. 2022 Jul 31;12(8):e9132. doi: 10.1002/ece3.9132. eCollection 2022 Aug.
Socioeconomic demand for natural capital is causing catastrophic losses of biodiversity and ecosystem functionality, most notably in regions where socioeconomic-and eco-systems compete for natural capital, e.g., energy (animal or plant matter). However, a poor quantitative understanding of what natural capital is needed to support biodiversity in ecosystems, while at the same time satisfy human development needs-those associated with human development within socioeconomic systems-undermines our ability to sustainably manage global stocks of natural capital. Here we describe a novel concept and accompanying methodology (relating the adult body mass of terrestrial species to their requirements for land area, water, and energy) to quantify the natural capital needed to support terrestrial species within ecosystems, analogous to how natural capital use by humans is quantified in a socioeconomic context. We apply this methodology to quantify the amount of natural capital needed to support species observed using a specific surveyed site in Scotland. We find that the site can support a larger assemblage of species than those observed using the site; a primary aim of the rewilding project taking place there. This method conceptualises, for the first time, a comprehensive "dual-system" approach: modelling natural capital use in socioeconomic-and eco-systems simultaneously. It can facilitate the management of natural capital at the global scale, and in both the conservation and creation (e.g., rewilding) of biodiversity within managed ecosystems, representing an advancement in determining what socioeconomic trade-offs are needed to achieve contemporary conservation targets alongside ongoing human development.
社会经济对自然资本的需求正在导致生物多样性和生态系统功能的灾难性损失,最显著的是在社会经济系统和生态系统争夺自然资本的地区,例如能源(动物或植物物质)。然而,对于支持生态系统中的生物多样性同时满足人类发展需求(那些与社会经济系统内的人类发展相关的需求)所需的自然资本缺乏定量的理解,这削弱了我们可持续管理全球自然资本存量的能力。在此,我们描述了一个新颖的概念及配套方法(将陆生物种的成体体重与其对土地面积、水和能源的需求相关联),以量化支持生态系统中陆生物种所需的自然资本,类似于在社会经济背景下对人类使用自然资本的量化方式。我们应用此方法来量化支持在苏格兰一个特定调查地点观察到的物种所需的自然资本量。我们发现该地点能够支持比在该地点观察到的物种更丰富的物种组合;这是在那里开展的野化项目的一个主要目标。这种方法首次概念化了一种全面的“双系统”方法:同时对社会经济系统和生态系统中的自然资本使用进行建模。它能够促进全球范围内自然资本的管理,以及在管理的生态系统中生物多样性的保护和创造(例如野化),代表了在确定为实现当代保护目标同时兼顾人类持续发展需要进行哪些社会经济权衡方面的一项进展。