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– states, provinces, nations – and political boundaries do not usually coincide with ecological boundaries.

      Species cannot survive in isolation from other species; they are all part of some ecosystem. Therefore all ecosystems have value because the species they support have value. In other words, at a minimum the value of an ecosystem is the summation of the value of all its constituent organisms. This idea is simple enough, but it is not the end of the story. We must also consider that ecosystems probably have special attributes that emerge from interactions among the component species and make them valuable beyond the sum of species‐specific values. Let us consider each of the major types of values that we evaluated in Chapter 3 from this perspective.

      Intrinsic Value

Schematic illustration of the ecosystems that are tightly connected systems of closely coevolved species.

      If ecosystems do have intrinsic value, then conservationists need to protect some examples of each different type of ecosystem, especially those that are in danger of disappearing. Some types of ecosystems are rare because they occur only in uncommon environments. For example, cool forests and alpine areas are rare in Africa because the continent has relatively few mountains tall enough to support these ecosystems (Kingdon 1989). Other ecosystem types have become uncommon because of human activities. In particular, most types of forest and grassland ecosystems associated with fertile soils and benign climates have largely been converted to agricultural lands.

Photo depicts some types of ecosystems with Mediterranean temporary pools, were always a small portion of the landscape and have shrunk further.

      (Viktor Loki/Shutterstock)

      Sources: Australia: deh.gov.au/epbc; Europe: europa.eu/legislation_summaries/environment/nature_and_biodiversity/l28076_en.htm; RSA: Mucina and Rutherford 2006; USA: Noss et al. 1995

Australia
Aquatic root mat community in caves of the Swan Coastal Plain Cumberland Plain shale woodlands Eastern Stirling Range montane heath and thicket Lowland native grasslands of Tasmania Parched wetlands of the Wheatbelt region Temperate highland peat swamps on sandstone
Europe
Inland salt meadows Mediterranean temporary ponds Temperate Atlantic wet heaths Xeric sand calcareous grasslands Fennoscandian deciduous swamp woods Eastern white oak woods
South Africa
Atlantic sand fynbos Bloemfontein dry grassland Cape vernal pools Ironwood dry forest Legogote sour bushveld Lowveld riverine forest Swartland alluvium fynbos
United States
Longleaf pine forests and savannas in the southeastern coastal plain Tallgrass prairie east of the Missouri River and on mesic sites across range Wet and mesic coastal prairies in Louisiana Coastal strand in southern California Ungrazed sagebrush steppe in the Intermountain West Streams in the Mississippi Alluvial Plain

      Instrumental Values

      The idea that ecosystems have instrumental values has a long history but the concept really took root with an important book, Nature’s Services (Daily 1997), that examined “ecosystem services” in depth. This term is a bit too narrow in that the concept encompasses all biodiversity values, not just those that are tightly tied to ecosystems, and both products (e.g. timber) as well as services (e.g. renewal of clean air and water). However, there is virtue in simplicity and “ecosystem services” has become a major rallying point for conservation activities that improve human welfare (Lele et al. 2013). Having covered the instrumental values of species in Chapter 3, here we will focus on those exhibited at the ecosystem level.

       Economic Values

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