Population Abundance and Ecosystem Service Provision: The Case of Birds
Author(s) -
Kevin J. Gaston,
Daniel T. C. Cox,
Sonia B. Canavelli,
Daniel Garcı́a,
Baz Hughes,
Bea Maas,
Daniel Martínez,
Darcy Ogada,
Richard Inger
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
bioscience
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.761
H-Index - 209
eISSN - 1525-3244
pISSN - 0006-3568
DOI - 10.1093/biosci/biy005
Subject(s) - ecosystem services , abundance (ecology) , defaunation , biodiversity , ecosystem , psychological resilience , population , ecology , ecosystem health , environmental resource management , geography , biology , economics , environmental health , psychology , rumen , food science , fermentation , psychotherapist , medicine
Although there is a diversity of concerns about recent persistent declines in the abundances of many species, the implications for the associated delivery of ecosystem services to people are surprisingly poorly understood. In principle, there are a broad range of potential functional relationships between the abundance of a species or group of species and the magnitude of ecosystem-service provision. Here, we identify the forms these relationships are most likely to take. Focusing on the case of birds, we review the empirical evidence for these functional relationships, with examples of supporting, regulating, and cultural services. Positive relationships between abundance and ecosystem-service provision are the norm (although seldom linear), we found no evidence for hump-shaped relationships, and negative ones were limited to cultural services that value rarity. Given the magnitude of abundance declines among many previously common species, it is likely that there have been substantial losses of ecosystem services, providing important implications for the identification of potential tipping points in relation to defaunation resilience, biodiversity conservation, and human well-being.
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