Regulating Ecosystem Services - StudyPulse
Boost Your VCE Scores Today with StudyPulse
8000+ Questions AI Tutor Help
Home Subjects Environmental Science Regulating services

Regulating Ecosystem Services

Environmental Science
StudyPulse

Regulating Ecosystem Services

Environmental Science
01 May 2026

Regulating Services

Regulating services are the benefits obtained from the regulation of ecosystem processes. Unlike provisioning services, they are indirect benefits — the ‘work’ that ecosystems do behind the scenes to keep conditions suitable for life.

Climate Regulation

Ecosystems play a critical role in moderating Earth’s climate:

Carbon Sequestration

Plants absorb $CO_2$ during photosynthesis:
$$6CO_2 + 6H_2O \xrightarrow{\text{light}} C_6H_{12}O_6 + 6O_2$$

Forests, peatlands and ocean phytoplankton are the primary carbon stores:
- Tropical forests store approximately 40% of terrestrial carbon
- Peatlands cover only 3% of land surface but store twice as much carbon as all forests combined
- Destruction of these systems releases stored carbon, accelerating climate change

Temperature and Rainfall Moderation

  • Forests increase local albedo and evapotranspiration, cooling surface temperatures
  • Coastal mangroves buffer storm surges and protect coastlines from erosion
  • Wetlands store flood water, reducing downstream flooding

Disease Regulation

Biodiverse ecosystems can suppress the transmission of infectious diseases through the dilution effect:
- High species diversity means pathogens are ‘diluted’ among many host species, reducing transmission to any single host
- Loss of biodiversity can increase disease transmission — deforestation has been linked to increases in malaria, Lyme disease and Ebola outbreaks
- Predators and competitors regulate populations of disease vectors (mosquitoes, rodents)

Example: In forests with high bird diversity, West Nile virus transmission is lower because the virus spreads among many non-competent hosts rather than concentrating in a few competent reservoir species.

Pollination

Pollination is one of the most economically important regulating services:

  • Approximately 75% of global food crops depend on animal pollination
  • Key pollinators: bees (wild and managed), butterflies, moths, flies, beetles, birds, bats
  • Estimated economic value: AUD\$6 billion annually in Australia alone

Threats to Pollinators

  • Pesticides (particularly neonicotinoids) impair bee navigation and reproduction
  • Habitat loss reduces floral resources
  • Climate change shifts flowering times, creating phenological mismatches between flowers and pollinators
  • Introduced pathogens (e.g. Varroa mite in European honeybees)

Victorian example: Australia’s native bee diversity (over 1,700 species) provides pollination services for both agriculture and natural ecosystems, but is threatened by land clearing and pesticide use.

Water Purification

Ecosystems filter and cleanse water through multiple processes:

Mechanism Description
Biological filtration Wetland plants and microbes absorb excess nutrients (N, P)
Physical filtration Roots and soil trap sediments
Chemical transformation Soil bacteria convert toxic nitrates to nitrogen gas (denitrification)
Pathogens UV exposure and predation in open water reduce bacterial loads

Example: Constructed wetlands are used globally to treat agricultural runoff and secondary sewage effluent, reducing costs compared to engineered water treatment systems.

Loss of Regulating Services

When regulating services are degraded:
- Climate regulation declines → stronger warming feedback
- Disease control fails → increased outbreaks
- Pollination decreases → food production costs rise
- Water purification is lost → human health risks increase, treatment costs escalate

COMMON MISTAKE: Students often confuse provisioning and regulating services. Remember: provisioning services supply products (things you can hold or consume); regulating services supply processes (things ecosystems do to maintain conditions).

Table of Contents