All Stories

  1. Why less complexity produces better forecasts: an independent data evaluation of kelp habitat models
  2. Approaching human-animal relationships from multiple angles: A synthetic perspective
  3. Do correlated responses to multiple environmental changes exacerbate or mitigate species loss?
  4. Valuation as destruction? The social effects of valuation processes in contested marine spaces
  5. Gone fishing? Intergenerational cultural shifts can undermine common property co-managed fisheries
  6. The Insignificance of Thresholds in Environmental Impact Assessment: An Illustrative Case Study in Canada
  7. Assessing nature's contributions to people
  8. Bird Killer, Industrial Intruder or Clean Energy? Perceiving Risks to Ecosystem Services Due to an Offshore Wind Farm
  9. Will communities “open-up” to offshore wind? Lessons learned from New England islands in the United States
  10. Predicting carbon benefits from climate-smart agriculture: High-resolution carbon mapping and uncertainty assessment in El Salvador
  11. Contemporary Evosystem Services: A Reply to Faith et al .
  12. Ecosystem Services and Cultural Values as Building Blocks for ‘The Good life’. A Case Study in the Community of Røst, Lofoten Islands, Norway
  13. Payments for Ecosystem Services: Rife With Problems and Potential—For Transformation Towards Sustainability
  14. Wild Salmon Sustain the Effectiveness of Parasite Control on Salmon Farms: Conservation Implications from an Evolutionary Ecosystem Service
  15. 5 Key Challenges and Solutions for Governing Complex Adaptive (Food) Systems
  16. Mechanisms and risk of cumulative impacts to coastal ecosystem services: An expert elicitation approach
  17. Relational values resonate broadly and differently than intrinsic or instrumental values, or the New Ecological Paradigm
  18. Agriculture erases climate-driven β-diversity in Neotropical bird communities
  19. Group elicitations yield more consistent, yet more uncertain experts in understanding risks to ecosystem services in New Zealand bays
  20. Evaluating ecosystem service trade-offs and synergies from slash-and-mulch agroforestry systems in El Salvador
  21. Off-stage ecosystem service burdens: A blind spot for global sustainability
  22. Evosystem Services: Rapid Evolution and the Provision of Ecosystem Services
  23. Sustainability beyond city limits: can “greener” beef lighten a city’s Ecological Footprint?
  24. Explicit Not Implicit Preferences Predict Conservation Intentions for Endangered Species and Biomes
  25. Sea otters, social justice, and ecosystem-service perceptions in Clayoquot Sound, Canada
  26. How Messaging Shapes Attitudes toward Sea Otters as a Species at Risk
  27. Conservation social science: Understanding and integrating human dimensions to improve conservation
  28. Making sense of environmental values: a typology of concepts
  29. Supporting Risk Assessment: Accounting for Indirect Risk to Ecosystem Components
  30. Mainstreaming the social sciences in conservation
  31. Nonnative Species in British Columbia Eelgrass Beds Spread via Shellfish Aquaculture and Stay for the Mild Climate
  32. Why protect nature? Rethinking values and the environment
  33. Debunking trickle-down ecosystem services: The fallacy of omnipotent, homogeneous beneficiaries
  34. Human impacts and ecosystem services: Insufficient research for trade-off evaluation
  35. From rational actor to efficient complexity manager: Exorcising the ghost of Homo economicus with a unified synthesis of cognition research
  36. The IPBES Conceptual Framework — connecting nature and people
  37. Theories of the deep: combining salience and network analyses to produce mental model visualizations of a coastal British Columbia food web
  38. Leaps of Faith: How Implicit Assumptions Compromise the Utility of Ecosystem Models for Decision-making
  39. Ecological effect of a nonnative seagrass spreading in the Northeast Pacific: A review of Zostera japonica
  40. What matters and why? Ecosystem services and their bundled qualities
  41. A protocol for eliciting nonmaterial values through a cultural ecosystem services frame
  42. Trading green backs for green crabs: evaluating the commercial shellfish harvest at risk from European green crab invasion
  43. Spatial distribution of marine invasive species: environmental, demographic and vector drivers
  44. A more social science: barriers and incentives for scientists engaging in policy
  45. Engaging Multiple Disciplines in Ecosystem Services Research and Assessment
  46. Humans and Nature: How Knowing and Experiencing Nature Affect Well-Being
  47. Ecosystem services and ethics
  48. Ecosystem Services and Beyond: Using Multiple Metaphors to Understand Human–Environment Relationships
  49. Sea Otters Homogenize Mussel Beds and Reduce Habitat Provisioning in a Rocky Intertidal Ecosystem
  50. A social–ecological approach to conservation planning: embedding social considerations
  51. Culture, intangibles and metrics in environmental management
  52. Economic costs of invasive green crabs, via lost shellfish harvest
  53. The Challenges of Incorporating Cultural Ecosystem Services into Environmental Assessment
  54. Ethical Considerations in On-Ground Applications of the Ecosystem Services Concept
  55. Catching the Right Wave: Evaluating Wave Energy Resources and Potential Compatibility with Existing Marine and Coastal Uses
  56. Navigating coastal values: Participatory mapping of ecosystem services for spatial planning
  57. Identifying spatial priorities for protecting ecosystem services
  58. Reply to Kirchhoff: Cultural values and ecosystem services
  59. Where are Cultural and Social in Ecosystem Services? A Framework for Constructive Engagement
  60. Contributions of cultural services to the ecosystem services agenda
  61. Quantifying potential propagule pressure of aquatic invasive species from the commercial shipping industry in Canada
  62. Rethinking ecosystem services to better address and navigate cultural values
  63. Modeling benefits from nature: using ecosystem services to inform coastal and marine spatial planning
  64. An Atlantic infaunal engineer is established in the Northeast Pacific: Clymenella torquata (Polychaeta: Maldanidae) on the British Columbia and Washington Coasts
  65. Ecosystem Services in Conservation Planning: Targeted Benefits vs. Co-Benefits or Costs?
  66. Structuring decision-making for ecosystem-based management
  67. Ethical Extensionism under Uncertainty of Sentience: Duties to Non-Human Organisms without Drawing a Line
  68. Erratum to “Representing mediating effects and species reintroductions in Ecopath with Ecosim” [Ecol. Model. 222 (2011) 1569–1579]
  69. Representing mediating effects and species reintroductions in Ecopath with Ecosim
  70. Making science relevant to marine ecosystem-based management
  71. Characterizing changes in marine ecosystem services
  72. Integrative propositions for adapting conservation policy to the impacts of climate change
  73. A Critical Course Change
  74. Protecting ecosystem services and biodiversity in the world's watersheds
  75. Leadership: a New Frontier in Conservation Science
  76. Modeling multiple ecosystem services, biodiversity conservation, commodity production, and tradeoffs at landscape scales
  77. Climate change and biodiversity conservation: impacts, adaptation strategies and future research directions
  78. The payoff of conservation investments in tropical countryside
  79. Value and Advocacy in Conservation Biology: Crisis Discipline or Discipline in Crisis?
  80. Conservation: in a rut, we need rut-inspired solutions
  81. Where can tigers persist in the future? A landscape-scale, density-based population model for the Indian subcontinent
  82. Ecosystem-Service Science and the Way Forward for Conservation
  83. SATELLITE DETECTION OF BIRD COMMUNITIES IN TROPICAL COUNTRYSIDE
  84. When Agendas Collide: Human Welfare and Biological Conservation
  85. Conservation Planning for Ecosystem Services
  86. Bridge over a philosophical divide
  87. Human Diets and Animal Welfare: the Illogic of the Larder
  88. Testing the importance of patch scale on forest birds
  89. Protecting Science from Abuse Requires a Broader Form of Outreach
  90. LEAKY PREZYGOTIC ISOLATION AND POROUS GENOMES: RAPID INTROGRESSION OF MATERNALLY INHERITED DNA
  91. SYMMETREE: whole-tree analysis of differential diversification rates
  92. Scientists must conquer reluctance to speak out
  93. Concern is more than just ‘ruffled feathers’
  94. The Golden Rule and the Potentiality Principle: Future Persons and Contingent Interests
  95. Intransitivity and Future Generations: Debunking Parfit's Mere Addition Paradox
  96. Whole-Tree Methods for Detecting Differential Diversification Rates
  97. Accounting for Mode of Speciation Increases Power and Realism of Tests of Phylogenetic Asymmetry
  98. Faculty of 1000 evaluation for Organic chemicals jeopardize the health of freshwater ecosystems on the continental scale.