Artículos de revistas
(Dis) integrated valuation – Assessing the information gaps in ecosystem service appraisals for governance support
Fecha
2018-02-01Registro en:
Ecosystem Services, v. 29, p. 529-541.
2212-0416
10.1016/j.ecoser.2017.10.021
2-s2.0-85039460157
2-s2.0-85039460157.pdf
Autor
Institute for Nature Research (NINA)
Environmental Social Science Research Group (ESSRG Ltd.)
Corvinus University of Budapest
Centre for Ecology and Hydrology
Institute of Ethics and Transdisciplinary Sustainability Research
Norwegian University of Life Sciences (NMBU)
Research Institute for Nature and Forest (INBO)
Environmental Research (Alterra)
Aarhus University
Ctra. Madrid-Barcelona (N-II)
Finnish Environment Institute
Environmental Change Institute
Centre for Ecology & Hydrology Maclean Building
Norwegian Institute for Nature Research (NINA)
Scientific Campus of the University of the Basque Country
Edifici Z (ICTA-ICP)
Marine Research (IMARES)
Constantine the Philosopher University in Nitra
Helmholtz-Centre for Environmental Research – UFZ
UMR TETIS
Universidade Nova de Lisboa
Kenya Forestry Research Institute (KEFRI)
Centro Austral de Investigaciones Científicas (CADIC CONICET)
C/Geldo
National Institute for Research and Development in Forestry “Marin Dracea”
MTA Centre for Ecological Research
IRIDRA Srl
University of Bucharest – Research Center in Systems Ecology and Sustainability
IBRAD (Indian Institute of Bio Social Research and Development)
Universidade Estadual Paulista (Unesp)
Institución
Resumen
The operational challenges of integrated ecosystem service (ES) appraisals are determined by study purpose, system complexity and uncertainty, decision-makers’ requirements for reliability and accuracy of methods, and approaches to stakeholder–science interaction in different decision contexts. To explore these factors we defined an information gap hypothesis, based on a theory of cumulative uncertainty in ES appraisals. When decision context requirements for accuracy and reliability increase, and the expected uncertainty of the ES appraisal methods also increases, the likelihood of methods being used is expected to drop, creating a potential information gap in governance. In order to test this information gap hypothesis, we evaluate 26 case studies and 80 ecosystem services appraisals in a large integrated EU research project. We find some support for a decreasing likelihood of ES appraisal methods coinciding with increasing accuracy and reliability requirements of the decision-support context, and with increasing uncertainty. We do not find that information costs are the explanation for this information gap, but rather that the research project interacted mostly with stakeholders outside the most decision-relevant contexts. The paper discusses how alternative definitions of integrated valuation can lead to different interpretations of decision-support information, and different governance approaches to dealing with uncertainty.