Premium
Linking human well‐being and jellyfish: ecosystem services, impacts, and societal responses
Author(s) -
Graham William M,
Gelcich Stefan,
Robinson Kelly L,
Duarte Carlos M,
Brotz Lucas,
Purcell Jennifer E,
Madin Laurence P,
Mianzan Hermes,
Sutherland Kelly R,
Uye Shin-ichi,
Pitt Kylie A,
Lucas Cathy H,
Bøgeberg Molly,
Brodeur Richard D,
Condon Robert H
Publication year - 2014
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 - 10.1890/130298
Subject(s) - jellyfish , ecosystem services , provisioning , ecosystem , environmental resource management , context (archaeology) , business , ecology , geography , biology , environmental science , computer science , telecommunications , archaeology
Jellyfish are usually perceived as harmful to humans and are seen as “pests”. This negative perception has hindered knowledge regarding their value in terms of ecosystem services. As humans increasingly modify and interact with coastal ecosystems, it is important to evaluate the benefits and costs of jellyfish, given that jellyfish bloom size, frequency, duration, and extent are apparently increasing in some regions of the world. Here we explore those benefits and costs as categorized by regulating, supporting, cultural, and provisioning ecosystem services. A geographical perspective of human vulnerability to jellyfish over four categories of human well‐being (health care, food, energy, and freshwater production) is also discussed in the context of thresholds and trade‐offs to enable social adaptation. Whereas beneficial services provided by jellyfish likely scale linearly with biomass (perhaps peaking at a saturation point), non‐linear thresholds exist for negative impacts to ecosystem services. We suggest that costly adaptive strategies will outpace the beneficial services if jellyfish populations continue to increase in the future.