Quantifying impacts of human pressures on ecosystem services: Effects of widespread non-indigenous species in the Baltic Sea

Ecosystem services (ES) are the benefits natural ecosystems provide to society, such as food provisioning, water supply, climate regulation and recreational benefits. Biological invasions are a major driver of global change, and several non-indigenous species (NIS) may alter key ecological feedbacks...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Science of the total environment 2023-02, Vol.858 (Pt 2), p.159975, Article 159975
Hauptverfasser: Ojaveer, Henn, Einberg, Heli, Lehtiniemi, Maiju, Outinen, Okko, Zaiko, Anastasija, Jelmert, Anders, Kotta, Jonne
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Ecosystem services (ES) are the benefits natural ecosystems provide to society, such as food provisioning, water supply, climate regulation and recreational benefits. Biological invasions are a major driver of global change, and several non-indigenous species (NIS) may alter key ecological feedbacks with ultimate consequences to ES, livelihoods and human wellbeing. Nonetheless, the effects of NIS on ES supply remain largely unquantified. Here we present the first quantitative case study assessing the impacts of widespread NIS on ES in the Baltic Sea, by developing and employing a robust and repeatable data-driven approach. All NIS with a sufficient knowledge base pose large and highly significant effects on ES, resulting on average 55 % change in the intensity of ES. Most impacts affected regulation services, concerning both abiotic and biotic realms, with little evidence on cultural and provisioning services. The methodology can be easily employed beyond the current study realm e.g. to better understand the roles of human pressures on ES in any ecosystem. Importantly, the study also identified major biases not only in the availability of taxonomic and sub-regional evidence, but also in the different study types employed to create the evidence base. [Display omitted] •This paper presents a framework to evaluate the effects of non-indigenous species (NIS) on ecosystem services (ES).•All studied NIS pose large and significant effects on ES.•Applicability of the framework extends to all realms.•Implementation of the framework will assist in moving to evidence-based assessments of NIS impacts.
ISSN:0048-9697
1879-1026
DOI:10.1016/j.scitotenv.2022.159975