River Science: Ecosystem Services Approach

 

John Maier (Forested mountains in coastal Atlantic forest of Parana in Brazil)

"River-floodplain ecosystems are often species rich, for a variety of reasons having to do with their age, size, habitat complexity, and variability."

— Richard E. Sparks, Bioscience


Go Deeper

The Rivers

Brazil: The Paraguay-Paraná

China: The Yangtze

USA: The Mississippi

Implementing Ecosystem Services-based Strategies

Read how the Conservancy is using ecosystem-based strategies to help restore bottomland forests in the Mississippi River Delta.

What is Nature Worth?

Nature provides many beneficial services for free. Learn more about the valuable services that ecosystems provide.

Resources for River Managers

Find links to reports and other information on rivers, ecosystem services and fresh water.

Although ecological systems support plants and animals, they do so much more: They provide vital services to people that improve well-being. Ecosystems, as scientists called them, purify water and air, reduce flood and drought risks, provide food and fuel, and support recreation, to name a few of the many benefits. To ensure these valuable services continue, our natural areas must be healthy to provide these valuable services.

Fortunately, a relatively new field of study, known as ecosystem services, is shedding new light on the importance of ecological services, while also providing new opportunities for protecting the diversity of life found on Earth. The Great Rivers Partnership is working to harness the "win-win" potential of improved ecosystem services and greater conservation action through the implementation of pilot projects, synthesis of lessons learned and development of maps, guidance and decision tools.

The partnership's three-part ecosystem services strategy includes:

  • implementing ecosystem service-based strategies for conservation within the Great Rivers Partnership focal river areas to test and evaluate approaches for achieving conservation outcomes;
  • synthesizing lessons learned from pilot efforts and share this knowledge to foster improvements in the use of ecosystem service-based conservation strategies; and
  • developing mapping, guidance and decision tools to support the integration of ecosystem services into a more comprehensive approach to biodiversity conservation and river basin planning.

 

 

 


Photo credits (top to bottom, left to right): Forested mountains in coastal Atlantic forest of Parana in Brazil © John Maier