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Ecosystem services across borders: a framework for transboundary conservation policy
Author(s) -
López-Hoffman Laura,
Varady Robert G,
Flessa Karl W,
Balvanera Patricia
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
frontiers in ecology and the environment
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.918
H-Index - 164
eISSN - 1540-9309
pISSN - 1540-9295
DOI - 10.1890/070216
Subject(s) - ecosystem services , provisioning , environmental resource management , business , ecosystem , service (business) , geography , environmental planning , ecology , economics , biology , telecommunications , marketing , computer science
International political borders rarely coincide with natural ecological boundaries. Because neighboring countries often share ecosystems and species, they also share ecosystem services. For example, the United States and Mexico share the provisioning service of groundwater provided by the All‐American Canal in California; the regulating service of agave crop pollination by long‐nosed bats; and the aesthetic value of the North American monarch butterfly, a cultural service . We use the Millennium Ecosystem Assessment (MA) to elucidate how drivers in one country can affect ecosystem services and human well‐being in other countries. We suggest that the concept of ecosystem services, as articulated by the MA, could be used as an organizing principle for transboundary conservation, because it meets many of the criteria for successful transboundary policy. It would frame conservation in terms of mutual interests between countries, consider a diversity of stakeholders, and provide a means for linking multiple services and assessing tradeoffs between uses of services.

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