Title: Principles of Ecosystem Management
1Principles of Ecosystem Management
2What do we mean by ecosystem management?
- Ecosystem approach tries to regulate our use of
ecosystems and natural resources so that we can
benefit from them, while at the same time
modifying the impacts on them so that basic
ecosystem functions are preserved. - An essential element of sustainable development
3A definition
- UN Convention on Biological Diversity 1992
- Ecosystem and natural habitats management seeks
to meet human requirements to use natural
resources, whilst maintaining the biological
richness and ecological processes necessary to
sustain the composition, structure and function
of the ecosystems concerned
4What do we mean by ecosystem structure and
function
5What do we mean by ecosystem structure and
function?
6Objective of ecosystem management
- Management objective is to ensure that goods and
services from ecosystems and habitats are
available on a sustainable basis - Management of ecosystems is applied within
identified boundaries ecosystem managers need
to understand different societies interact with
the systems within which they live
7Focus of management actions
- Human actions are the focus of ecosystem
management - Adjusting chemical conditions
- Regulating physical parameters
- Altering biological interrelationships
- Controlling human use of biological productivity
- Intervening in cultural, social and economic
processes
8Maintaining ecosystem function and integrity
- Structure and functional integrity of the system
should be maintained - There are few natural ecosystems that have not
been modified by human activity - Use of functions purposefully, but be aware of
natural limits - Use it, dont lose it
9Recognising ecosystem boundaries and
transboundary issues
- Primary focus for actions should be on human
activities that affect the components and
processes within the boundaries of ecosystem - Ecosystem processes do not respect administrative
boundaries these may cut across functional
linkages of an ecosystem - Ecosystems may be affected by distant actions,
outside the management boundaries - Concepts of Core Zones, Buffer Zones, transition
areas - Consider ecological corridors between core areas
and buffer zones that allow for plant and animal
migrations
10Maintaining biodiversity
- Loss of biological diversity in an area can lead
to loss of goods and services provided by the
ecosystem - Management should try to maintain biological
diversity - Important to monitor biodiversity since change is
a sensitive indicator of damage - Some species are an indicator of ecosystem health
- Some species are important as flagships which
people can understand and work to conserve
11Recognizing the inevitability of change
- Change in ecosystems is occurring all the time,
some may be - Natural and geological processes and events
- Human activities agriculture, dams, urban
growth and pollution - Climate change induced drought, rainfall
- Need to be aware of inevitable changes, decide
what changes to mitigate against. - Social Choice
12Recognising people as part of the ecosystem
- People are an integral part of most ecosystems
- People are using and depending upon natural
resources - Decisions about the use of these natural
resources should involve the people using them
13Reasons for involving local communities
- They have an interest in the management process
- They have considerable, relevant knowledge of the
ecosystem and its management - Cultural, ethical and spiritual values have
developed because of the interaction with
ecosystem - Traditional use and tenure systems can be adapted
to aims and objectives of ecosystem management
14Recognising the need for knowledge based adaptive
management
- Ecosystem management should incorporate a
knowledge-based adaptive management approach
but - Beware of top-down information imposed from
outside - Information gathering is an integral part of
management, this must be analysed and decisions
taken
15Existing Scientific and social information
Define
Management Actions
Identify further research needs
adapt
Ongoing Research
New Management Actions
Ongoing adapted management actions
16Knowledge-based management
- Precautionary principle if you dont know,
proceed with care, it is better to be safe than
sorry - Be aware of functional limits of the system, try
to define the limits of acceptable change, or
critical loads. - Adjust resource use levels to be within these
limits
17Recognising the need for multi-sector
collaboration
- Different sectors have different expectations and
uses of the ecosystem - Need for multi-sectoral collaboration,, need to
maintain these uses - Identify the sectors involved, consult, reach
agreement on management methods
18Multi-sectoral partnerships
- Review policies of different sectors to identify
areas of conflict and compatibility - Share information about methods, activities and
results - Agree where data is stored and access
- Share ideas for actions based on other
organisations experiences - Coordination and integration of information
gathering - Avoid duplication and work for synergy
- Spread the workload and responsibility for
management - Identify sites and habitats that are critical to
ecosystem services and that require special forms
of management and co-operation
19Making ecosystem management a mainstream
development approach
- Ecosystem management is not just a tool for
protecting special areas - It should be applied in all development
initiatives, e.g. infrastructure, dams etc. - The principles provide guidance on things such as
social choice, stakeholder involvement, adaptive
management, impact assessment
20Practical exercise
- Divide into small groups of about 5 8 persons
in each - Each person identifies 3 issues that they are
dealing with in their work and these are listed - The group then discusses how the ecosystem
principles can be applied in dealing with these
issues