Demonstrating the importance of intangible ecosystem services from peri-urban landscapes
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Demonstrating the importance of intangible ecosystem services from peri-urban landscapes. / Vejre, Henrik; Jensen, Frank Søndergaard; Thorsen, Bo Jellesmark.
In: Ecological Complexity : An International Journal on Biocomplexity in the Environment and Theoretical Ecology, Vol. 7, No. 3, 2010, p. 338-348.Research output: Contribution to journal › Journal article › Research › peer-review
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TY - JOUR
T1 - Demonstrating the importance of intangible ecosystem services from peri-urban landscapes
AU - Vejre, Henrik
AU - Jensen, Frank Søndergaard
AU - Thorsen, Bo Jellesmark
N1 - Ecosystem Services – Bridging Ecology, Economy and Social Sciences
PY - 2010
Y1 - 2010
N2 - Among ecosystem services, the various categories of intangible services linked to human perception, such as aesthetics, recreational values and cultural heritage, must be rated alongside tangible services linked to physical processes, such as wildlifew habitats, clean water and air, and filter- and buffer effects. This is a pre-requisite for a sustainable development with a balance between ecological, social and economic values. We analyse ecosystem services in areas of the urban fringe of Copenhagen, where the services provided are mainly related to human perception. We employ relatively simple methods in selected landscapes to qualify or quantify the aesthetics and recreational value, and the scale of the welfare economic value of these ecosystem services. In the first case area, the Danish state aquired 50 villas covering more than 50 ha in order to recreate open vistas and gain accass for the public to the seaside. In the second case area, peri-urban landscapes were protected by conservation orders, to maintain and enhance the benefits of green space for the growing urban population. We assess the value - in a broad sense - of these ecosystem services using three practical methods: a landscape evaluation in terms of services and qualities, an assessment of actual recreational use, and finally an assessment of the costs - in terms of residential development values lost - of securing the provoision of aesthetic quallities and recreational opportunities. Searching the original planning documents we uncovered the origional motivations for the land evaluation and descision. The arguments behind the designation and protection of the areas were primally aesthetic and potentials for recreational use. The two areas receive annually 2-2.5 million and 400.000 visits respectively, providinge their strong recrational value. The value of the demolished houses in first case are exceeds 115 million euros, and the value of the lost development opportunities in the second case area axceeds 280 million euros.
AB - Among ecosystem services, the various categories of intangible services linked to human perception, such as aesthetics, recreational values and cultural heritage, must be rated alongside tangible services linked to physical processes, such as wildlifew habitats, clean water and air, and filter- and buffer effects. This is a pre-requisite for a sustainable development with a balance between ecological, social and economic values. We analyse ecosystem services in areas of the urban fringe of Copenhagen, where the services provided are mainly related to human perception. We employ relatively simple methods in selected landscapes to qualify or quantify the aesthetics and recreational value, and the scale of the welfare economic value of these ecosystem services. In the first case area, the Danish state aquired 50 villas covering more than 50 ha in order to recreate open vistas and gain accass for the public to the seaside. In the second case area, peri-urban landscapes were protected by conservation orders, to maintain and enhance the benefits of green space for the growing urban population. We assess the value - in a broad sense - of these ecosystem services using three practical methods: a landscape evaluation in terms of services and qualities, an assessment of actual recreational use, and finally an assessment of the costs - in terms of residential development values lost - of securing the provoision of aesthetic quallities and recreational opportunities. Searching the original planning documents we uncovered the origional motivations for the land evaluation and descision. The arguments behind the designation and protection of the areas were primally aesthetic and potentials for recreational use. The two areas receive annually 2-2.5 million and 400.000 visits respectively, providinge their strong recrational value. The value of the demolished houses in first case are exceeds 115 million euros, and the value of the lost development opportunities in the second case area axceeds 280 million euros.
U2 - 10.1016/j.ecocom.2009.09.005
DO - 10.1016/j.ecocom.2009.09.005
M3 - Journal article
VL - 7
SP - 338
EP - 348
JO - Ecological Complexity
JF - Ecological Complexity
SN - 1476-945X
IS - 3
ER -
ID: 16303903