@article{5a30af5dd23f4c25938eeaca7afd20e5,
title = "The ecosystem services and biodiversity of novel ecosystems: A literature review",
abstract = "Scientists, policy makers, and managers use ecosystem services and biodiversity metrics to inform management goals of novel ecosystems. Fragmented knowledge of the ecosystem services provided by novel ecosystems contributes to disagreement over these systems and how they should be managed. To address this gap, we conducted a systematic review of refereed articles to understand how novel ecosystems have changed ecosystem services and biodiversity. Despite anthropogenic drivers of change, we found that the literature on novel ecosystems is focused on ecological rather than social aspects of novel systems. Our review highlights the frequency that novel ecosystems enhance both ecosystem services and biodiversity. More than two-thirds of studies reported biodiversity equal to or above the reference state, while the portion of studies reporting increased cultural, provisioning, and regulating services was even greater. Still, we urge caution in interpreting these trends, as they exist in part due to degraded ecosystem baselines and inconsistent framing. Finally, the wide range of management recommendations we reviewed reflects both the diversity of novel ecosystems and substantial disagreement among researchers and managers about what novel ecosystems actually mean for society.",
keywords = "Biodiversity, Ecosystem-services, Novel-ecosystems, Review, Trade-offs",
author = "Evers, {Cody R.} and Wardropper, {Chloe B.} and Ben Branoff and Granek, {Elise F.} and Hirsch, {Shana L.} and Link, {Timothy E.} and Sof{\'i}a Olivero-Lora and Codie Wilson",
note = "Funding Information: This paper was developed from a working group convened during the Fourth Conference for Sustainability IGERTs (C4SI4), a graduate student-led conference hosted by the Ecosystem Services supporting Urbanizing Regions IGERT at Portland State University (PSU) in Portland, Oregon, and supported by NSF IGERT Grant # DGE-0966376 : “Sustaining Ecosystem Services to Support Rapidly Urbanizing Areas.” Additional support was provided by Grant # DGE-0966346 : “I-WATER: Integrated Water, Atmosphere, Ecosystems Education and Research Program” at Colorado State University , # DGE-1249400 to the University of Idaho , # DGE-0801577 to the University of Puerto Rico at R{\'i}o Piedras (UPR) , and # DGE- 1144752 to the University of Wisconsin-Madison . Finally, we would like to acknowledge the valuable comments provided by several anonymous reviewers. Funding Information: This paper was developed from a working group convened during the Fourth Conference for Sustainability IGERTs (C4SI4), a graduate student-led conference hosted by the Ecosystem Services supporting Urbanizing Regions IGERT at Portland State University (PSU) in Portland, Oregon, and supported by NSF IGERT Grant # DGE-0966376: ?Sustaining Ecosystem Services to Support Rapidly Urbanizing Areas.? Additional support was provided by Grant #DGE-0966346: ?I-WATER: Integrated Water, Atmosphere, Ecosystems Education and Research Program? at Colorado State University, #DGE-1249400 to the University of Idaho, #DGE-0801577 to the University of Puerto Rico at R?o Piedras (UPR), and #DGE- 1144752 to the University of Wisconsin-Madison. Finally, we would like to acknowledge the valuable comments provided by several anonymous reviewers. Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2018 The Authors",
year = "2018",
month = jan,
doi = "10.1016/j.gecco.2017.e00362",
language = "English (US)",
volume = "13",
journal = "Global Ecology and Conservation",
issn = "2351-9894",
publisher = "Elsevier B.V.",
}