@Article{JonasOBFHLMTLSSNN:2014:OvDiPo,
author = "Jonas, Matthias and Ometto, Jean Pierre Henry Balbaud and
Batistella, Mateus and Franklin, Oskar and Hall, Marianne and
Lapola, David M. and Moran, Emilio F. and Tramberend, Sylvia and
Lanza Queiroz, Bernardo and Schaffartzik, Anke and Shvidenko,
Anatoly and Nilsson, Sten B. and Nobre, Carlos A.",
affiliation = "{International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis} and
{Instituto Nacional de Pesquisas Espaciais (INPE)} and EMBRAPA and
{rnational Institute for Applied Systems Analysis} and {Lund
Universit} and {Universidade de S{\~a}o Paulo (USP)} and
{Michigan State University} and {international Institute for
Applied Systems Analysis} and {Universidade Federal de Minas
Gerais (UFMG)} and {Alpen Adria University Klagenfurt-Wien-Graz}
and {International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis} and
{Forest Sector Insights AB} and {Minist{\'e}rio da Ci{\^e}ncia e
Tecnologia (MCT)}",
title = "Sustaining ecosystem services: Overcoming the dilemma posed by
local actions and planetary boundaries",
journal = "Earth's Future",
year = "2014",
volume = "2",
number = "8",
pages = "n/a-n/a",
abstract = "Resolving challenges related to the sustainability of natural
capital and ecosystem services is an urgent issue. No roadmap on
reaching sustainability exists; and the kind of sustainable land
use required in a world that acknowledges both multiple
environmental boundaries and local human well-being presents a
quandary. In this commentary, we argue that a new globally
consistent and expandable systems-analytical framework is needed
to guide and facilitate decision making on sustainability from the
planetary to the local level, and vice versa. This framework would
strive to link a multitude of Earth system processes and targets;
it would give preference to systemic insight over data complexity
through being highly explicit in spatiotemporal terms. Its
strength would lie in its ability to help scientists uncover and
explore potential, and even unexpected, interactions between
Earths subsystems with planetary environmental boundaries and
socioeconomic constraints coming into play. Equally importantly,
such a framework would allow countries such as Brazil, a case
study in this commentary, to understand domestic or even local
sustainability measures within a global perspective and to
optimize them accordingly.",
doi = "10.1002/2013ef000224",
url = "http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/2013ef000224",
issn = "2328-4277",
label = "lattes: 1325667605623244 2 JonasOBFHLMTLSSNN:2014:OvDiPo",
language = "en",
urlaccessdate = "28 abr. 2024"
}