Mapping Ecosystem Services to Human Well-being: a toolkit to support integrated landscape management for the SDGs.

Ecol Appl

Bioversity International, CGIAR, Parc scientifique Agropolis II, 1990 Boulevard de la Lironde, Montpellier, 34397, France.

Published: December 2019

AI Article Synopsis

  • The Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) focus on making the world better by connecting nature's health to people's well-being, but it's tough to measure without the right tools.
  • A new toolkit called "MESH" helps combine different models that study nature to see how they affect human life and supports various SDGs.
  • MESH was designed with feedback from many groups in West Africa and includes features like scenario planning and visualizing results, showing how different conservation methods can help balance nature and agriculture.

Article Abstract

The Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) emphasize the global and multi-dimensional nature of sustainability and thus require improving our capacity to articulate and trace the impact of ecosystem change to measures of human well-being. Yet, the integrated nature of these goals is challenging to assess without similarly integrated assessment tools. We present a new modeling toolkit, "Mapping Ecosystem Services to Human well-being" (MESH), that integrates commonly used, stand-alone ecosystem services (ES) models from the InVEST suite of models to quantify and illustrate the trade-offs and synergies across five ecosystem services and up to 10 associated SDGs. Development of the software and its functionality were informed by a broad stakeholder consultation with ministries, non-governmental organizations and civil society groups in West Africa to identify common barriers to uptake and application of modeling tools in developing countries. In light of this process, key features included in MESH are (1) integration of multiple ecosystem service (ES) models into a common modeling framework supported by a curated base data set, (2) built-in scenario generation capacity to support policy analysis, (3) visualization of outcomes and trade-offs, and (4) mapping of ecosystem service change to SDG targets and goals. We illustrate the use of MESH in a case study in the Volta basin of West Africa comparing the effectiveness of three alternative conservation prioritization approaches: (1) land cover-based, (2) topographic-based, and (3) an ecosystem service-based approach to minimize the impact of agricultural expansion. We evaluate these approaches by linking changes in service supply to potential impacts on achievement of specific SDG goals and targets.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/eap.1985DOI Listing

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