Description

Book Synopsis
* Ecosystem goods and services provide mankind with most necessities of life and survival * Addresses the hitherto under-estimation of Ecosystem Services in farmland, forestry and cities * Explores developing concepts, policies and methods of evaluating ecosystem services in engineered systems .

Trade Review

“In summary, I think that this book is a useful addition to the literature. . . Thus, I would recommend this book to economists, policy makers, land managers and students wanting to get a relatively clear and concise overview on the key aspects of ES.” (Australian Journal of Agricultural & Resource Economics, 8 January 2014)

“This book is an introductory text that will be useful to students and researchers from a broad range of fields. What I do like and thoroughly enjoyed about this book is that it demonstrates the multiple facets or faces of ecosystem services and the benefits humans derive from them.” (Restoration Ecology, 1 September 2013)



Table of Contents

Contributors xi

Reviewers xiv

Foreword xv

Introduction xvi
Steve Wratten, Harpinder Sandhu, Ross Cullen and Robert Costanza

Part A: Scene Setting 1

1 Ecosystem Services in Farmland and Cities 3
Harpinder Sandhu and Steve Wratten

Abstract 3

Introduction 4

What are ecosystem services? 4

Ecosystem functions, goods and services 5

The ES framework 6

Engineered systems 7

Agricultural systems 7

Urban systems 10

ES and their interactions in engineered systems 11

2 Ecological Processes, Functions and Ecosystem Services: Inextricable Linkages between Wetlands and Agricultural Systems 16
Onil Banerjee, Neville D. Crossman and Rudolf S. de Groot

Abstract 16

Introduction 17

Linking ecosystem function with ecosystem service 18

Wetlands 19

Wetland functions 20

Wetland–agricultural systems interactions 22

Some research challenges 24

Understanding complexity and resilience 24

Trade-offs 25

3 Key Ideas and Concepts from Economics for Understanding the Roles and Value of Ecosystem Services 28
Pamela Kaval and Ramesh Baskaran

Abstract 28

How can ecosystem services be valued? 28

Ecosystem service valuation methodologies 31

Revealed preference methods 32

Stated preference methods 32

Other methods 33

How ecosystem services have been measured in the past 34

Ecosystem service valuation study recommendations 37

Conclusions 39

Part B: Ecosystem Services in Three Settings 43

4 Viticulture can be Modified to Provide Multiple Ecosystem Services 45
Sofia Orre-Gordon, Marco Jacometti, Jean Tompkins and Steve Wratten

Abstract 45

Introduction 45

Enhancing CBC in vineyards 46

Leafrollers and Botrytis cinerea in the vineyards 48

Habitat modification to enhance naturally occurring pest control 48

Floral resource supplementation as a form of habitat modification 48

Mulch application as a form of habitat modification 49

Combining two forms of habitat modification 51

The deployment of herbivore-induced plant volatiles as a form of habitat modification 51

Habitat modification may provide further ecosystem services 52

The future 55

5 Aquaculture and Ecosystem Services: Reframing the Environmental and Social Debate 58
Corinne Baulcomb

Abstract 58

Introduction 58

Aquaculture and the environment 59

A typology of aquaculture operations and the link to ecosystem services 60

Inland production systems 64

Overview 64

Case study 1: hypothetical integrated agriculture–aquaculture carp polyculture 65

Case study 2: hypothetical inland marine shrimp cultivation 68

Marine and coastal-based production systems 71

Overview 71

Case study 3: hypothetic nearshore, intensive and raft-based shellfish cultivation 72

Case study 4: hypothetical ‘best-case’ offshore aquaculture cultivation 75

The value of a complementary life-cycle approach 75

Conclusion 77

6 Urban Landscapes and Ecosystem Services 83
Jürgen Breuste, Dagmar Haase and Thomas Elmqvist

Abstract 83

Growing urban landscapes 83

The process of urbanization 83

Urbanization, biodiversity and ecosystems 86

Urbanization and management of ecosystems – challenges 86

Urban ecosystem services 87

What are urban ecosystem services? 87

Classification of UES 88

Land use – basic information on human influence on ecosystem services 88

Urban green – carrier of UES 89

Types of urban green space 89

Recreation 90

Climate regulation 91

Biodiversity 94

Carbon mitigation 95

Rapid growth of soil sealing – destruction of UES and its avoidance 95

Climate change – challenges for UES 97

Increase in temperature 98

Precipitation 99

Sea level rise 100

UES in urban landscape planning 100

Part C: Measuring and Monitoring Ecosystem Services at Multiple Levels 105

7 Scale-dependent Ecosystem Service 107
Yangjian Zhang, Claus Holzapfel and Xiaoyong Yuan

Abstract 107

Introduction 107

Scale 108

Ecosystem service is scale dependent 108

The ecosystem beneficiary is scale dependent 109

Ecosystem service measurement is scale dependent 109

Ecosystem service management decision making is scale dependent 112

Ecosystem service types 112

Ecosystem service studies need to consider scale 113

Case studies 114

Liberty State Park Interior 115

Qinghai-Tibet plateau 117

Conclusions 118

8 Experimental Assessment of Ecosystem Services in Agriculture 122
Harpinder Sandhu, John Porter and Steve Wratten

Abstract 122

Introduction 122

ES in agroecosystems 123

Provisioning goods and services 124

Supporting services 124

Regulating services 124

Cultural services 124

Field-scale assessment of ES 127

The combined food and energy system 128

New Zealand arable farmland 129

Scenarios of production and ES in agroecosystems 131

The ethnocentric systems 131

The technocentric systems 131

The ecocentric systems 131

The ecotechnocentric systems 132

The sustaincentric systems 132

Conclusions 133

Part D: Designing Ecological Systems to Deliver Ecosystem Services 137

9 Towards Multifunctional Agricultural Landscapes for the Upper Midwest Region of the USA 139
Nicholas Jordan and Keith Douglass Warner

Abstract 139

Introduction 139

Multifunctional agroecosystems 140

Re-designed agricultural landscapes for the Upper Midwest 141

Moving forward on design and implementation of multifunctional landscapes for the Upper Midwest 142

Theory of change: a social–ecological system model for increasing multifunctionality of agricultural landscapes 143

Focal level: enterprise development via ‘virtuous circles’ 143

Subsystem level: collaborative social learning for multifunctional agriculture 147

Supersystem level: re-visioning the social metabolism of American agriculture 148

Applying the theory of change: the Koda Energy fuelshed project 149

Enterprise development 150

Agroecological partnership 152

Re-shaping public opinion and policy 153

Conclusions 153

10 Supply Chain Management and the Delivery of Ecosystems Services in Manufacturing 157
Mary Haropoulou, Clive Smallman and Jack Radford

Abstract 157

Towards the sustainable economic production of goods and services? 158

Ecological economics and supply chain management: a review and synthesis 158

Conventional economic and ecologically economic production 158

Conventional SCM: economic efficiency through distribution network configuration and strategy 160

Green SCM: the economic inefficiency of waste 161

Sustainable SCM: connecting social, economic and ecological performance 162

Enabling ecological economics: SSCM 163

A case in point: ‘what do we do with it now?’ 165

WYM background 166

The economic production of wool yarn 167

Goods 168

Wastes 169

Ecological services and amenities 169

Natural capital 169

Human capital 171

Social capital 173

Manufactured capital 174

Community and individual well-being 175

Discussion 175

Conclusion 176

11 Market-based Instruments and Ecosystem Services: Opportunity and Experience to Date 178
Stuart M. Whitten and Anthea Coggan

Abstract 178

Introduction 179

Market-based instruments: definition and preconditions 180

Types of MBIs 180

Examples of MBIs for ecosystem services 184

Price-based MBIs 184

Quantity-based MBIs 186

Market friction MBIs 188

The brave new world of ecosystem markets 189

Designing effective MBIs 189

Where to next in the brave new world of markets for ecosystem services? 190

Epilogue: Equitable and Sustainable Systems 194
Steve Wratten, Harpinder Sandhu, Ross Cullen and Robert Costanza

Index 196

Ecosystem Services in Agricultural and Urban

    Product form

    £63.86

    Includes FREE delivery

    RRP £70.95 – you save £7.09 (9%)

    Order before 4pm today for delivery by Fri 3 Jul 2026.

    A Hardback by Stephen Wratten, Harpinder Sandhu, Ross Cullen

      Trusted by thousands of customers. See 2,385+ Customer Reviews

      View other formats and editions of Ecosystem Services in Agricultural and Urban by Stephen Wratten

      Publisher: John Wiley and Sons Ltd
      Publication Date: 22/02/2013
      ISBN13: 9781405170086, 978-1405170086
      ISBN10: 1405170085

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      * Ecosystem goods and services provide mankind with most necessities of life and survival * Addresses the hitherto under-estimation of Ecosystem Services in farmland, forestry and cities * Explores developing concepts, policies and methods of evaluating ecosystem services in engineered systems .

      Trade Review

      “In summary, I think that this book is a useful addition to the literature. . . Thus, I would recommend this book to economists, policy makers, land managers and students wanting to get a relatively clear and concise overview on the key aspects of ES.” (Australian Journal of Agricultural & Resource Economics, 8 January 2014)

      “This book is an introductory text that will be useful to students and researchers from a broad range of fields. What I do like and thoroughly enjoyed about this book is that it demonstrates the multiple facets or faces of ecosystem services and the benefits humans derive from them.” (Restoration Ecology, 1 September 2013)



      Table of Contents

      Contributors xi

      Reviewers xiv

      Foreword xv

      Introduction xvi
      Steve Wratten, Harpinder Sandhu, Ross Cullen and Robert Costanza

      Part A: Scene Setting 1

      1 Ecosystem Services in Farmland and Cities 3
      Harpinder Sandhu and Steve Wratten

      Abstract 3

      Introduction 4

      What are ecosystem services? 4

      Ecosystem functions, goods and services 5

      The ES framework 6

      Engineered systems 7

      Agricultural systems 7

      Urban systems 10

      ES and their interactions in engineered systems 11

      2 Ecological Processes, Functions and Ecosystem Services: Inextricable Linkages between Wetlands and Agricultural Systems 16
      Onil Banerjee, Neville D. Crossman and Rudolf S. de Groot

      Abstract 16

      Introduction 17

      Linking ecosystem function with ecosystem service 18

      Wetlands 19

      Wetland functions 20

      Wetland–agricultural systems interactions 22

      Some research challenges 24

      Understanding complexity and resilience 24

      Trade-offs 25

      3 Key Ideas and Concepts from Economics for Understanding the Roles and Value of Ecosystem Services 28
      Pamela Kaval and Ramesh Baskaran

      Abstract 28

      How can ecosystem services be valued? 28

      Ecosystem service valuation methodologies 31

      Revealed preference methods 32

      Stated preference methods 32

      Other methods 33

      How ecosystem services have been measured in the past 34

      Ecosystem service valuation study recommendations 37

      Conclusions 39

      Part B: Ecosystem Services in Three Settings 43

      4 Viticulture can be Modified to Provide Multiple Ecosystem Services 45
      Sofia Orre-Gordon, Marco Jacometti, Jean Tompkins and Steve Wratten

      Abstract 45

      Introduction 45

      Enhancing CBC in vineyards 46

      Leafrollers and Botrytis cinerea in the vineyards 48

      Habitat modification to enhance naturally occurring pest control 48

      Floral resource supplementation as a form of habitat modification 48

      Mulch application as a form of habitat modification 49

      Combining two forms of habitat modification 51

      The deployment of herbivore-induced plant volatiles as a form of habitat modification 51

      Habitat modification may provide further ecosystem services 52

      The future 55

      5 Aquaculture and Ecosystem Services: Reframing the Environmental and Social Debate 58
      Corinne Baulcomb

      Abstract 58

      Introduction 58

      Aquaculture and the environment 59

      A typology of aquaculture operations and the link to ecosystem services 60

      Inland production systems 64

      Overview 64

      Case study 1: hypothetical integrated agriculture–aquaculture carp polyculture 65

      Case study 2: hypothetical inland marine shrimp cultivation 68

      Marine and coastal-based production systems 71

      Overview 71

      Case study 3: hypothetic nearshore, intensive and raft-based shellfish cultivation 72

      Case study 4: hypothetical ‘best-case’ offshore aquaculture cultivation 75

      The value of a complementary life-cycle approach 75

      Conclusion 77

      6 Urban Landscapes and Ecosystem Services 83
      Jürgen Breuste, Dagmar Haase and Thomas Elmqvist

      Abstract 83

      Growing urban landscapes 83

      The process of urbanization 83

      Urbanization, biodiversity and ecosystems 86

      Urbanization and management of ecosystems – challenges 86

      Urban ecosystem services 87

      What are urban ecosystem services? 87

      Classification of UES 88

      Land use – basic information on human influence on ecosystem services 88

      Urban green – carrier of UES 89

      Types of urban green space 89

      Recreation 90

      Climate regulation 91

      Biodiversity 94

      Carbon mitigation 95

      Rapid growth of soil sealing – destruction of UES and its avoidance 95

      Climate change – challenges for UES 97

      Increase in temperature 98

      Precipitation 99

      Sea level rise 100

      UES in urban landscape planning 100

      Part C: Measuring and Monitoring Ecosystem Services at Multiple Levels 105

      7 Scale-dependent Ecosystem Service 107
      Yangjian Zhang, Claus Holzapfel and Xiaoyong Yuan

      Abstract 107

      Introduction 107

      Scale 108

      Ecosystem service is scale dependent 108

      The ecosystem beneficiary is scale dependent 109

      Ecosystem service measurement is scale dependent 109

      Ecosystem service management decision making is scale dependent 112

      Ecosystem service types 112

      Ecosystem service studies need to consider scale 113

      Case studies 114

      Liberty State Park Interior 115

      Qinghai-Tibet plateau 117

      Conclusions 118

      8 Experimental Assessment of Ecosystem Services in Agriculture 122
      Harpinder Sandhu, John Porter and Steve Wratten

      Abstract 122

      Introduction 122

      ES in agroecosystems 123

      Provisioning goods and services 124

      Supporting services 124

      Regulating services 124

      Cultural services 124

      Field-scale assessment of ES 127

      The combined food and energy system 128

      New Zealand arable farmland 129

      Scenarios of production and ES in agroecosystems 131

      The ethnocentric systems 131

      The technocentric systems 131

      The ecocentric systems 131

      The ecotechnocentric systems 132

      The sustaincentric systems 132

      Conclusions 133

      Part D: Designing Ecological Systems to Deliver Ecosystem Services 137

      9 Towards Multifunctional Agricultural Landscapes for the Upper Midwest Region of the USA 139
      Nicholas Jordan and Keith Douglass Warner

      Abstract 139

      Introduction 139

      Multifunctional agroecosystems 140

      Re-designed agricultural landscapes for the Upper Midwest 141

      Moving forward on design and implementation of multifunctional landscapes for the Upper Midwest 142

      Theory of change: a social–ecological system model for increasing multifunctionality of agricultural landscapes 143

      Focal level: enterprise development via ‘virtuous circles’ 143

      Subsystem level: collaborative social learning for multifunctional agriculture 147

      Supersystem level: re-visioning the social metabolism of American agriculture 148

      Applying the theory of change: the Koda Energy fuelshed project 149

      Enterprise development 150

      Agroecological partnership 152

      Re-shaping public opinion and policy 153

      Conclusions 153

      10 Supply Chain Management and the Delivery of Ecosystems Services in Manufacturing 157
      Mary Haropoulou, Clive Smallman and Jack Radford

      Abstract 157

      Towards the sustainable economic production of goods and services? 158

      Ecological economics and supply chain management: a review and synthesis 158

      Conventional economic and ecologically economic production 158

      Conventional SCM: economic efficiency through distribution network configuration and strategy 160

      Green SCM: the economic inefficiency of waste 161

      Sustainable SCM: connecting social, economic and ecological performance 162

      Enabling ecological economics: SSCM 163

      A case in point: ‘what do we do with it now?’ 165

      WYM background 166

      The economic production of wool yarn 167

      Goods 168

      Wastes 169

      Ecological services and amenities 169

      Natural capital 169

      Human capital 171

      Social capital 173

      Manufactured capital 174

      Community and individual well-being 175

      Discussion 175

      Conclusion 176

      11 Market-based Instruments and Ecosystem Services: Opportunity and Experience to Date 178
      Stuart M. Whitten and Anthea Coggan

      Abstract 178

      Introduction 179

      Market-based instruments: definition and preconditions 180

      Types of MBIs 180

      Examples of MBIs for ecosystem services 184

      Price-based MBIs 184

      Quantity-based MBIs 186

      Market friction MBIs 188

      The brave new world of ecosystem markets 189

      Designing effective MBIs 189

      Where to next in the brave new world of markets for ecosystem services? 190

      Epilogue: Equitable and Sustainable Systems 194
      Steve Wratten, Harpinder Sandhu, Ross Cullen and Robert Costanza

      Index 196

      Recently viewed products

      © 2026 Book Curl

        • American Express
        • Apple Pay
        • Diners Club
        • Discover
        • Google Pay
        • Maestro
        • Mastercard
        • PayPal
        • Shop Pay
        • Union Pay
        • Visa

        Login

        Forgot your password?

        Don't have an account yet?
        Create account