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Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services in historical perspective Univ.-Prof. Ing. Dr. Verena Winiwarter Centre for Environmental History, Vienna http://umweltgeschichte.uniklu.ac.at/home.php ALTER-Net conference - Biodiversity and Ecosystem services; what is the link between the two? Vienna, November 3-4, 2010 1 /19 A quick definition and appraisal of ecosystem services „Ecosystem services are defined as ‘‘the benefits people obtain from ecosystems’’ (Millennium Ecosystem Assessment, 2005). I think this is a good, appropriately broad and appropriately vague definition.“ (Costanza 2008, 350) 2 Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services are connected 3 The loss of services to humanity following extinctions ranges from trivial to catastrophic, depending on the number of elements (populations, species, guilds) deleted and the degree of control each exerted in the system. Most attempts to substitute other organisms for those lost have been unsuccessful, to one degree or another, and prospects for increasing the success rate in the foreseeable future are not great. Attempts to supply the lost services by other means tend to be expensive failures in the long run. A conservative approach to the maintenance of services through minimizing anthropogenic extinctions is recommended. Paul R. Ehrlich and Harold A. Mooney, Extinction, Substitution, and Ecosystem Services BioScience, Vol. 33, No. 4 (Apr. 1983), pp. 248254, here 248 4 The argument • For subsistence hunter-gatherers, biodiversity, ecosystem services and their livelihood were one, as they tapped energy flows in natural ecosystems. • Pre-industrial agriculturalists relied on ecosystem services for their livelihood. They diverted energy from natural flows into their agro-ecosystems. Some natural systems became “pests”, competing non-agricultural land-uses could endanger the services agriculture relied on. • Industrial food-producing systems take a major portion of their energy from fossil fuels, and thus can seriously compromise natural energy flows. Agricultural AND non-agricultural landuses endanger ecosystem services. • In a post-fossil fuel world, this will change. Starting with degraded ecosystems will make this change difficult or impossible. 5 6 The example: Silver Mining in Colonial Mexico Mining facts: From the 16th to 19th centuries, over 50.000 tons of silver were sent from the colony to Spain. For each kilogram more than 6000 m2 forest were needed, altogether more than 315.000 km2. Between 1558 and 1804, 20% of Mexico, an area the size of Italy or Poland, was deforested. While some indigenous peoples worked for the mines, initially many fought against the Spaniards. Daviken Studnicki-Gizbert, David Schecter, Environmental History, 2010, 94-119. 7 Ecosystem Facts Hilly to mountainous area, low water input, high solar radiation, high daytime temperatures. Keystone species: Shrub oak, oaks, willows, poplars, mesquite. Ecosystem services by mesquite and other trees Leguminous species, very long roots able to tap low groundwater, act as nitrogen pump (300 kg NH4NO3/ y/ha), nitrogen is spread into surroundings during torrential rains, pods and seeds are source of protein ands carbohydrates for animals, SHADE reduces temperature and evaporation, 15 mammal and 95 bird species counted in one mesquite stand All trees: critical in soil building, erosion protection by dissipation of rain energy through leaf cover, divert water into subsoil. 8 More ecosystem facts • Vegetated areas in semi-arid environments hold water for 150-225 days longer than bare soil patches. • Fertile soil, water, shade and wind cover lmade mixed Mesquite forests habitats of high biodiversity. 9 Guachichile-Chichimecan uses of the Mesquite Forests 10 Human uses of Mesquite: pods as a staple food (flour) sewing needles from the thorns; inner bark for baskets and fabric; sap for black dye; honey from the nectar wood for bows and arrows for hunting, firewood: smokeless, burns slowly 11 3 people could produce 40 kg of flour per day! 12 Mesquite forests were rich foraging grounds • Deer, rats, birds were hunted, insects gathered • Other plant species were also used: • Acorns, • Agave juice, • Prickly pear cactus fruit Ecosystem services in a diverse ecosystem provided THE LIVELIHOOD of huntergatherers. 13 Zimapán, México, ca. 1898 Denuding the mountains robbed the indigenous peoples of their means of survival. Working for Spanish mines or accepting the offer to settle, convert to Christian religion and become agriculturalists were their only resort. Silver (in the money used for 'Paz por compra‘) © became Lily Diaz a substitute for the ecosystem services no longer available. Pueblo Fantasma (Ghost Town) at the old silver mine above Real de Catorce in San Luis Potosi, Mexico. Oct. 28, 2008 14 Davis O'Keeffe How about diversity today? 15 Vaclav Smil, Enriching the Earth, 2004, 142 16 The Haber process is energy-intensive and is estimated to consume approximately 1% of the energy used worldwide each year. The link between energy and fertilizer production is very important because the Haber process is used to produce about 500 million tons of nitrogen fertilizer each year which in turn supports about 40% of the world's population. Any decrease in the availability of energy, particularly from a decline in fossil fuel production (used as energy itself and as a feedstock) could cause a significant interruption in the production of fertilizer. (The Encyclopedia of Earth, 2010) 17 • For subsistence hunter-gatherers, biodiversity, ecosystem services and their livelihood were one, as they tapped energy Solar energy was harvested. flows in natural ecosystems. • Pre-industrial agriculturalists relied on ecosystem services for their livelihood. They diverted energy from natural flows into their Agriculture had a positive energy balance, solar agro-ecosystems. Some natural systems became “pests”, energy harvested. competingwas non-agricultural land-uses could endanger the services agriculture relied on. • Industrial food-producing systems take a major portion of their energy from fossil and thus can seriously compromise Agriculture hasfuels, at best a slightly positive energy natural energy flows. Agricultural ANDor non-agricultural balance, more often it is zero negative. land-uses endanger ecosystem services. • In a post-fossil fuel world, energy . Starting with degraded ecosystems will make this change difficult or impossible. We will need to harvest solar energy again. 18 Nature and Us The labour of nature is paid, not because she does much, but because she does little. In proportion as she becomes niggardly in her gifts, she exacts a greater price for her work. Where she is unificently beneficent, she always works gratis. (David Ricardo 1817) • If we start a post-fossil future with simplified ecosystems, the price of nature will be great. • In the post-fossil world, the connection between livelihoods, biodiversity and ecosystem services will tighten for ALL. 19