PhD Oral Defence: The dynamics of multiple ecosystem services: Improving models for better management of multifunctional landscapes
PhD Oral Defence of Jesse Rieb, Natural Resource Sciences
People around the world depend on ecosystems to provide them with a variety of benefits, known as ecosystem services (ES). Understanding and quantifying ES is a powerful tool for conserving ecosystems and supporting people鈥檚 wellbeing, in part because quantification of these benefits allows them to be more easily compared with other costs and benefits and because it demonstrates how conservation of ecosystems can bring real, tangible benefits to people. ES are provided by complex webs of interacting social and ecological components and processes, and decision-makers rely on ES models to make sense of this complexity. In order to be broadly useful to decision-makers who wish to protect the health and well-being of ecosystems and people, ES models must be capable of providing clear and accurate information about when, where, and how ES are provided. In this thesis, I focus on two challenges for current ES models鈥攖he spatial and temporal dynamics of ES and the co-production of ES by natural and human drivers鈥攚ith the aim of developing a better understanding of these aspects of ES provision that can eventually lead to improved ES models. Using a mix of remote sensing, spatial analysis, statistical analysis, and simulation modelling, I show how the interactions among multiple ES are mediated by the configuration of landscapes, how ES provision can be non-linearly related to both natural and technological drivers, and how the dynamics of the drivers of ES provision can lead to unexpected long-term outcomes of ES management decisions. Together, this work helps develop a more detailed understanding of how to manage the dynamic social-ecological systems that provide critical ES.