98%
921
2 minutes
20
The rapid environmental changes of the Anthropocene create legacy effects that may shape future Earth system responses. One significant legacy effect is the species extinction debt caused by past habitat destruction. As biodiversity underpins ecosystem services vital to human societies, social-ecological systems may, in turn, be subjected to biodiversity-dependent ecosystem service debts. While biodiversity-dependent ecosystem service debts have been quantified with analytical approaches, less attention has been paid to their potential impact on social-ecological system trajectories. We performed a theoretical study of a dynamical systems model that includes the possibility of biodiversity-dependent ecosystem service debts emerging from past habitat destruction. Our results suggest that these debts reduce systems' safe operating spaces and create environmental tipping points associated with critical transitions in system states. These transitions, however, may include long transients of apparent stability, making it difficult to identify cause and effect. Notably, biodiversity-dependent ecosystem service debts may drive initial phases of apparent recovery after disturbance, still followed by system collapse. Our theoretical findings highlight the need to consider biodiversity-dependent ecosystem service debts for sustainable management of social-ecological systems. Furthermore, these results suggest that social-ecological systems' safe operating spaces cannot be reliably inferred from recent observations of apparent system stability.
Download full-text PDF |
Source |
---|---|
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC12380482 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2025.1744 | DOI Listing |
Proc Biol Sci
August 2025
Department of Geography, University of Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland.
The rapid environmental changes of the Anthropocene create legacy effects that may shape future Earth system responses. One significant legacy effect is the species extinction debt caused by past habitat destruction. As biodiversity underpins ecosystem services vital to human societies, social-ecological systems may, in turn, be subjected to biodiversity-dependent ecosystem service debts.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNat Commun
June 2022
Department of Geography, Remote Sensing Laboratories, University of Zürich, Winterthurerstrasse 190, 8057, Zürich, Switzerland.
Growing threats from extreme climatic events and biodiversity loss have raised concerns about their interactive consequences for ecosystem functioning. Evidence suggests biodiversity can buffer ecosystem functioning during such climatic events. However, whether exposure to extreme climatic events will strengthen the biodiversity-dependent buffering effects for future generations remains elusive.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAmbio
December 2019
Department of Environment and Geography, University of York, Room 313, 290 Wentworth Way, Heslington, York, YO10 5NG, UK.
Recent land-use and climatic shifts are expected to alter species distributions, the provisioning of ecosystem services, and livelihoods of biodiversity-dependent societies living in multifunctional landscapes. However, to date, few studies have integrated social and ecological evidence to understand how humans perceive change, and adapt agro-ecological practices at the landscape scale. Mixed method fieldwork compared observed changes in plant species distribution across a climatic gradient to farmers' perceptions in biodiversity and climate change in rice-cultivated farms.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEcol Econ
December 2018
Centre for Biodiversity Theory and Modelling, Theoretical and Experimental Ecology Station, CNRS and Paul Sabatier University, Moulis, France.
The destruction of natural habitats for agricultural production results in local biodiversity loss. Biodiversity loss in turn affects agricultural production indirectly through a range of biodiversity-dependent ecosystem services. Land conversion thus results in a negative externality, mediated by changes in biodiversity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEcol Lett
February 2015
Department of Plant Biology, University of Georgia, Athens, GA, 30602, USA; Department of Ecology, Evolution & Behavior, University of Minnesota, Saint Paul, MN, 55108, USA.
Habitat destruction is driving biodiversity loss in remaining ecosystems, and ecosystem functioning and services often directly depend on biodiversity. Thus, biodiversity loss is likely creating an ecosystem service debt: a gradual loss of biodiversity-dependent benefits that people obtain from remaining fragments of natural ecosystems. Here, we develop an approach for quantifying ecosystem service debts, and illustrate its use to estimate how one anthropogenic driver, habitat destruction, could indirectly diminish one ecosystem service, carbon storage, by creating an extinction debt.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF