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The Wealth of Nature Is the Wealth of Nations: Ecosystem Services and Their Value to Society

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Abstract

Everyone is aware of nature. It is all around us. Nature is the weather, sunshine, winds, rain, flowing rivers, and the tides on the coast. It is also the living world, including forests, grasslands, wetlands, and farm fields. There is also much that we don’t see, from microscopic organisms such as protozoans, bacteria, and fungi to the many chemical reactions that take place in nature. If we live in the country, we may experience much of nature very directly. Even in the middle of cities, there are parks, trees along streets, weeds in the cracks in sidewalks, and for many the green spaces around homes. But for most people, especially in a developed country like the U.S., nature is out there. It is something we enjoy, or not, as our mood dictates. Unless we work in one of the occupations where people interact intimately with nature, such as farming, forestry, field biology (the authors of this book), or fishing (Alice Monro’s drowned fisherman), our contact with nature is casual and somewhat intermittent. For most people living in cities, jobs have little directly to do with nature. This is important since the majority of the world’s people now live in cities and reaching more than 80 % for the U.S. Weather is a factor in our lives, but it is generally externalized as a potential source of pleasure or inconvenience, not the matter of economic survival that it is for a farmer. Nature is something we can choose to experience or not, often with—at best—a vague realization that others working in primary economic production such as farming, fishing, logging, and mining are dependent on nature for their direct economic well-being, which in turn assures access for office workers, doctors, teachers and carpenters to the essential products of these activities.

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Notes

  1. 1.

    John Greer. 2011. The Wealth of Nature. New Society Publishers, British Columbia, Canada.

  2. 2.

    Day, J., J. Gunn, W. Folan, A. Yanez, and B. Horton. 2012. The influence of enhanced post-glacial coastal margin productivity on the emergence of complex societies. The Journal of Island and Coastal Archaeology, 7, 23–52.

  3. 3.

    Costanza et al. 1997. The value of the World’s Ecosystem Services and Natural Capital. Nature Vol. 387. 15 May 1997. See also Millenium Ecosystem Assessment, 2005. Ecosystems and Human Well-being: Synthesis. Island Press, Washington D.C.

    The subject of ecosystem goods and services and how we should value them is beyond the scope of this book but we provide a number of references in the literature section.

  4. 4.

    Shaffer, G., J. Day, S. Mack, P. Kemp, I. van Heerden, M. Poirrier, K. Westphal, D. FitzGerald, A. Milanes, C. Morris, R. Bea, and S. Penland. 2009. The MRGO navigation project: A massive human-induced environmental, economic, and storm disaster. Journal of Coastal Research, SI 54, 206–224.

  5. 5.

    Costanza et al. 2007, ibid.

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    Ko Jae-Young, et al. 2012. Policy adoption of ecosystem services for a sustainable community: A case study of wetland assimilation using natural wetlands in Breaux Bridge, Louisiana. Ecological Engineering, 38, 114–118.

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    Ko Jae-Young. 2007. The Economic Value of Ecosystem Services Provided by the Galveston Bay/Estuary System. Final Report. Texas Commission on Environmental Quality Galveston Bay Estuary. Available online: files.harc.edu/Projects/Nature/GalvestonBayEconomicValue.pdf.

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    Costanza et al. 2007, ibid.

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    Timoney, K. 2013. The Peace-Athabasca Delta: Portrait of a Dynamic Ecosystem. University of Alberta Press, 608 p.

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    Batker, D., et al. 2014. The importance of Mississippi Delta Restoration on the Local and National Economies. In Perspectives on the Restoration of the Mississippi Delta: The Once and Future Delta. Eds. Day J.W., Kemp G.P., Freeman A.M., Muth D.P. pp. 155–173. Springer, Dordrecht, The Netherlands.

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    Vitousek PM, Mooney HA, Lubchenco J, Melillo JM. 1997. Human domination of earth’s ecosystems. Science, 277, 494–499.

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    Vitousek PM, Ehrlich PR, Ehrlich AH, Matson PA. 1986. Human appropriation of the products of photosynthesis. BioScience, 36, 368–373.

  15. 15.

    For example, Pauly, J., Christensen, V., et al. 1998. Fishing down marine food webs. Science, 279, 860–863.

  16. 16.

    Vitousek et al. 1997 ibid.; Galloway, J.N., Aber, J.D., Erisman, J.W., Seitzinger, S.P., Howarth, R.W., Cowling, E.B., Cosby, B.J. 2003. The nitrogen cascade. BioScience, 54, 341–356.

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    Nixon S.W., et al. 1996. The fate of nitrogen and phosphorous at the land sea margin of the North Atlantic Ocean. Biogeochemistry, 35, 141–180.

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    Pimentel et al. 2005. Update on the environmental and economic costs associated with alien-invasive species in the United States. Ecological Economics, 52(3), 273–288.

  19. 19.

    Pimentel et al. 2005. Ibid.

  20. 20.

    See Elizabeth Kolbert. 2014. The Sixth Extinction. Henry Holt, New York. 319 p.

  21. 21.

    Wackernagel, M., Schulz, N., Deumling, D., Callejas Linares, A., Jenkins, M., Kapos, V., Monfreda, C., Loh, J., Myers, N., Norgaard, R., & Randers, J., 2002. Tracking the ecological overshoot of the human economy. Proceedings of the National Academy of Science 99(14), 9266–9271.

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    Rees, W.E. 2006. “Ecological Footprints and Bio-Capacity: Essential Elements in Sustainability Assessment.” In Jo Dewulf and Herman Van Langenhove (eds) Renewables-Based Technology: Sustainability Assessment, pp. 143–158. Chichester, UK: John Wiley and Sons.

  23. 23.

    For fuller details of the method, including inclusions, exceptions and limitations, see Rees, 2006, ibid.

    World Wide Fund for Nature, Gland, Switzerland WWF (2010) Living Planet Report 2010. and www.footprintnetwork.org/atlas.

  24. 24.

    William Rees. 2012. Cities as dissipative structures: Global change and vulnerability of urban civilization. In M. Weinstein and R. Turner (eds), Sustainability Science. Springer, New York.

  25. 25.

    WWF 2010, ibid.

  26. 26.

    William Ashworth, 2006. Ogallala Blue: Water and Life on the High Plains. Published by the Countryman Press, Woodstock, VT.

  27. 27.

    Junk, W. J. et al. 1989. The flood pulse concept in river-floodplain systems. Pages 110–127 in D. P. Dodge, (ed). Proceedings of the International Large River Symposium. Canadian Special Publications Fisheries Aquatic Sciences, 106.

  28. 28.

    Costanza, R. et al. 1998. Special Section: Forum on Valuation of Ecosystem Services. The value of ecosystem services: putting the issues in perspective. Ecological Economics 25, 67–72.

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Day, J.W., Hall, C. (2016). The Wealth of Nature Is the Wealth of Nations: Ecosystem Services and Their Value to Society. In: America’s Most Sustainable Cities and Regions. Copernicus, New York, NY. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4939-3243-6_5

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