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Ecosystem Services Overview

Environmental Science
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Ecosystem Services Overview

Environmental Science
01 May 2026

Ecosystems as a Source of Renewable Services

Ecosystems provide a vast array of services that are essential to human health and well-being. These are collectively known as ecosystem services — the benefits that people obtain from ecosystems, either directly or indirectly.

The Millennium Ecosystem Assessment Framework

The Millennium Ecosystem Assessment (2005) categorised ecosystem services into four groups, now standard in environmental science:

Category What It Provides Examples
Provisioning Goods extracted from ecosystems Food, water, timber, medicine
Regulating Benefits from ecosystem processes Climate stability, flood control, pollination
Supporting Services that underpin all others Nutrient cycling, soil formation, primary production
Cultural Non-material benefits Recreation, aesthetics, spiritual value

Why ‘Renewable’?

Ecosystem services are described as renewable because, if ecosystems are maintained in a healthy state, they can continue providing these services indefinitely. However, this renewability has limits:
- Over-extraction (e.g. overfishing, deforestation) can degrade the system beyond its capacity to recover
- Pollution and climate change can permanently alter ecosystem function
- Once lost, some services may be irreplaceable or extremely costly to restore

Ecosystem Services and Human Health

  • Clean water (provisioning + regulating): Wetlands filter pathogens and toxins from water supplies
  • Disease regulation: Biodiverse ecosystems can suppress vector-borne disease outbreaks (dilution effect)
  • Pharmaceuticals: ~50% of modern drugs are derived from or inspired by natural compounds (e.g. aspirin from willow bark, penicillin from fungi)
  • Food security: Agricultural systems depend on pollination, soil formation and water cycling

Mental and Physical Well-being

Research consistently shows access to green spaces reduces stress, improves mental health and encourages physical activity. This is sometimes called the biophilia effect — humans have an innate affinity with nature.

Economic Valuation of Ecosystem Services

Ecosystem services were estimated to be worth US\$125–145 trillion per year globally (Costanza et al., 2014) — exceeding global GDP. This valuation is used to:
- Inform cost-benefit analyses of development decisions
- Justify conservation investment
- Underpin the user pays principle (those who benefit from or degrade services should bear costs)

Threats to Ecosystem Services

  • Land clearing reduces provisioning and regulating services
  • Wetland drainage eliminates water purification and flood buffering
  • Coral bleaching destroys fish nursery habitats and coastal protection
  • Soil degradation reduces agricultural and supporting services

Ecosystem Services in Decision-Making

The ecosystem services framework is now embedded in Australian environmental law and planning:
- Environmental Impact Assessments must consider service loss
- Offset programs attempt to compensate for service degradation
- Natural capital accounting is increasingly used by governments

KEY TAKEAWAY: Ecosystem services are not luxuries — they are the biological infrastructure upon which human survival depends. The ‘renewable’ label only holds if ecosystems remain functional; unsustainable use destroys this renewability.

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