A Model for Disentangling Dependencies and Impacts among Human Activities and Marine Ecosystem Services.

Environ Manage

Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Department of Aquatic Resources, Institute of Coastal Research, Skolgatan 6, 74242, Öregrund, Sweden.

Published: May 2020

AI Article Synopsis

  • Understanding the connections between human activities and marine ecosystem services is essential for effective ecosystem-based management, which seeks to balance ecological, economic, and social aspects of sea use.
  • A model using the DAPSIR framework evaluates human activities in Swedish marine waters, revealing the complexities of their dependencies and impacts on marine ecosystem services across different economic sectors.
  • The study highlights that while sectors like commercial fishing heavily rely on marine ecosystems and significantly impact them, tourism shows lower environmental impact and higher economic value, providing insights for better environmental management and planning.

Article Abstract

Understanding and communicating the links among human activities and marine ecosystem services are fundamental for ecosystem-based management, which aims at attaining ecological, economic and social sustainability in the use of our seas. Relationships are typically complex and may differ between geographic areas. Here, an assessment model that combines available quantitative, semi-quantitative and qualitative information, rooted in the DAPSIR (Driver-Activity-Pressure-State-Impact-Response) framework and assessment requirements of the EU Marine Strategy Framework Directive, is developed and applied. Focusing on Swedish marine waters, major human activities at sea are evaluated in relation to their dependencies and impacts on the status of marine ecosystem services. This case study is a consensus assessment based on evaluation of available literature and data. By relating degrees of dependencies and impacts to values of different economic sectors, discrepancies among sectors with respect to their impact versus their monetary value can be identified. In our case, commercial fishing depends on and influences a wide range of ecosystem services, while other sectors, such as shipping, depend little on marine ecosystem services. At the extreme end of the range, pressures from human activities in the past, such as historical nutrient emissions, still have prominent influence on ecosystem services today, entailing considerable losses. Marine tourism and commercial fishing show similar dependencies on ecosystem services, but tourism has a clearly lower impact on ecosystem services and a higher monetary value. The model may serve as a useful tool for communicating and guiding priorities in integrated environmental management and maritime spatial planning.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7145787PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00267-020-01260-1DOI Listing

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