Featured – IPBES | Intergovernmental Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services https://esa.org/ipbes Tue, 04 Dec 2018 17:58:21 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.5.3 Web Conference: Land Degradation and Restoration Knowledge Gaps and Needs https://esa.org/ipbes/web-conference-land-degradation-and-restoration-knowledge-gaps-and-needs/ https://esa.org/ipbes/web-conference-land-degradation-and-restoration-knowledge-gaps-and-needs/#respond Tue, 04 Dec 2018 17:50:49 +0000 http://esa.org/ipbes/?p=641 IPBES invites governments, experts, and other stakeholders to participate in a web conference whose objective is to review and further explore knowledge gaps and discuss knowledge needs and priorities regarding land degradation and restoration.

This web conference will build on the knowledge gaps identified in the IPBES Assessment Report on Land Degradation and Restoration. It will provide an interactive, transparent and inclusive platform for the discussion of these gaps, the consultation on knowledge needs of policymakers and practitioners, and the identification of priority areas for relevant knowledge generation. The ultimate objective is to inform research, policy and funding agencies, and to catalyze the generation of new knowledge. The overall scope includes gaps and needs related to data, information, knowledge and infrastructure.

The three-week web conference will take place from January 14th to February 4th, 2019, and be moderated by the Co-Chairs of the Land Degradation and Restoration Assessment, Robert Scholes and Luca Montanarella.
The proceedings of the web conference will include a list of suggested priority knowledge needs.

The proposed conference format is as follows:

  • (January 14): Introductory webinar: Presentation of knowledge gaps identified by the Assessment and conference overview
  • Week 1 (Jan 14–18): Identifying knowledge gaps: Invitation for feedback on knowledge gaps identified
  • Week 2 (Jan 21–25): Prioritizing knowledge needs: Reflecting on knowledge needs in practice and policy
  • Week 3 (Jan 28–Feb 1): Addressing knowledge needs: Seeking suggestions on how to address knowledge needs
  • (February 4): Concluding webinar: Synthesis of contributions

More information on the web conference can be found on the IPBES website. Interested participants are kindly asked to register via the online registration form. Once registration has been approved, the secretariat will send a confirmation email and further information about the web conference.

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IPBES Pollinators Assessment Released https://esa.org/ipbes/ipbes-pollinators-assessment-released/ https://esa.org/ipbes/ipbes-pollinators-assessment-released/#respond Fri, 02 Dec 2016 16:53:38 +0000 http://esa.org/ipbes/?p=573 We are pleased to inform you that the IPBES thematic Assessment on Pollinators, Pollination and Food Production has been released and is available to download on the IPBES website at https://goo.gl/QKpaZ4.

A Science Policy Forum article that builds on the work of the Assessment was published last Friday: “Ten policies for pollinators.” A Nature review was published this Monday: “Safeguarding pollinators and their values to human well-being”.

IPBES will be hosting an IPBES pollination side-event at the CBD COP13 in Mexico, on Tuesday, 6 December 2016, presenting key finding and messages from the Assessment, with a focus on informing national action plans and implementation.

Please share the report and its Summary for Policymakers (SPM) with your networks, institutions and associates. We count on your assistance to help ensure its widest possible reach and greatest impact.

To learn more about the pollination assessment, visit IPBES Pollination.

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Government: Plan for ecosystem services https://esa.org/ipbes/government-plan-for-ecosystem-services/ https://esa.org/ipbes/government-plan-for-ecosystem-services/#respond Wed, 09 Mar 2016 16:46:13 +0000 http://esa.org/ipbes/?p=459 In a letter in Science published on March 4, 2016, the ESA-IPBES Steering Committee highlights the value of IPBES’s work in U.S. government policy related to ecosystem services. The text is available below, or in pdf form here.

 

Government: Plan for ecosystem services

Natural and managed ecosystems provide food, water, and other valuable services to human societies. Unnoticed by many in the scientific community, the values associated with ecosystem services have been integrated into U.S. government policy. A recent administration memo (1) put U.S. federal agencies on notice: The clock is ticking to integrate ecosystem services into their planning and decision-making. By 30 March 2016, agencies are to describe approaches for “conducting decision-relevant and scale-specific ecosystem-services assessments, as well as plans for effective monitoring and evaluation.” The administration stresses that such policies may be most effective when incorporated into existing decision-making frameworks.

As members of the Ecological Society of America’s (ESA’s) Steering Committee on the Intergovernmental Platform for Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services (IPBES) (2), we urge U.S. federal agencies to consider how this recent mandate provides opportunities to leverage the global impact of IPBES while achieving national policy objectives. IPBES, which was established with support from the United States but not mentioned in the administration’s memo, provides scientific assessments of the state of biodiversity and ecosystem services (3). At its fourth plenary, one month before the administration’s deadline, IPBES will likely approve the first of its global ecosystem service assessments.

We encourage U.S. federal agencies to familiarize themselves with these assessments and the ongoing IPBES work program. Creating a cross-agency policy agenda for understanding, monitoring, and managing ecosystem services in the United States would reduce the risk of scattered and inconsistent national-level policy mechanisms and would align U.S. policy and IPBES goals. Seeking input from the country’s scientific community would help build a secure foundation for these policies and offer U.S. scientists an opportunity to contribute their knowledge to the scientific foundations upon which effective environmental policy rests.

Lucas N. Joppa,1* James W. Boyd,2 Clifford S. Duke,3 Stephanie Hampton,4 Stephen T. Jackson,5 Katharine L. Jacobs,6 Karim-Aly S. Kassam,7 Harold A. Mooney,8 Laura A. Ogden,9 Mary Ruckelshaus,10 Jason F. Shogren11
1Microsoft Research, Redmond, WA 98052, USA. 2 Resources for the Future, Washington, DC 20036, USA. 3Ecological Society of America, Washington, DC 20036, USA. 4Washington State University, Center for Environmental Research, Education and Outreach, Pullman, WA 99164, USA. 5United States Geological Survey, Southwest Climate Science Center, Tucson, AZ 85721, USA. 6University of Arizona, Center for Climate Adaptation Science and Solutions, Tucson, AZ 85721, USA. 7Cornell University, Department of Natural Resources, Ithaca, NY 14850, USA. 8Stanford University, Department of Biological Sciences, Stanford, CA 94305, USA. 9Dartmouth University, Department of Anthropology, Hanover, NH 03755, USA. 10The Natural Capital Project, Stanford University, Stanford, CA 94305, USA. 11University of Wyoming, College of Business, Laramie, WY 82071, USA.

*Corresponding author. E-mail: lujoppa@microsoft.com

References
1. S. Donovan, C. Goldfuss, J. Holdren, “Incorporating Ecosystem Services into Federal Decision Making” (2015); www.whitehouse.gov/sites/default/files/omb/memoranda/2016/m-16-01.pdf.

2. ESA, IPBES (https://esa.org/ipbes/).

3. IPBES (http://ipbes.net/).

Photo Credit: BLM Oregon.

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9 U.S. Experts and 1 U.S. Young Fellow Chosen for Deliverables https://esa.org/ipbes/9-u-s-experts-and-1-u-s-young-fellow-chosen-for-deliverables/ https://esa.org/ipbes/9-u-s-experts-and-1-u-s-young-fellow-chosen-for-deliverables/#respond Thu, 06 Aug 2015 19:45:34 +0000 http://esa.org/ipbes/?p=427 Over 473 experts and 32 young fellows have been chosen for the four regional (Africa, Americas, Asia Pacific, Europe and Central Asia) and land degradation and restoration assessments. The United States is represented by 9 experts and 1 young fellow across three assessments (Africa, Americas, and land degradation and restoration).

Please see below for the list of American experts, and links to the full list of chosen experts.

Congratulations to the chosen nominees!

 

Deliverable 2(b): Regional assessment of biodiversity and ecosystem services for Africa

Chapter 3: Status, trends and future dynamics of biodiversity and ecosystems underpinning nature’s benefits to people

  • Amy Dunham (Rice University) – Lead author

Deliverable 2(b): Regional assessment of biodiversity and ecosystem services and functions for the Americas

Chapter 1: Setting the scene

  •  Kelly Garbach (Loyola University Chicago) – Lead Author
  • Judith Weis (Rutgers University) – Lead Author (Invasive Alien Species)

Chapter 3: Status, trends and future dynamics of biodiversity and ecosystems underpinning nature’s benefits to people

  • Jeannine Cavender-Bares (University of Minnesota) – Coordinating Lead Author (Sustainable Use of Biodiversity)

Chapter 4: Direct and indirect drivers of change in the context of different perspectives of quality of life

  • Eileen Helmer (USDA Forest Service International Institute of Tropical Forestry) – Coordinating Lead Author
  • Forest Isbell (University of Minnesota) – Lead Author (Land Degradation and Restoration)

Chapter 5: Integrated and cross:scale analysis of interactions of the natural world and human society

  • Brian Klatt – Coordinating Lead Author

Chapter 6: Options for governance, institutional arrangements and private and public decision making across scales and sectors

  • Jayne Belnap (U.S. Geological Survey) – Lead Author (Land Degradation and Restoration)

Young Fellow

  • Laura Thompson (U.S. Geological Survey, National Climate Change and Wildlife Science Center)

Deliverable 2(b): Regional assessment of biodiversity and ecosystem services for Asia and the Pacific

  • No U.S. experts chosen.

Deliverable 2(b): Regional assessment on biodiversity and ecosystem services for Europe and Central Asia

  • No U.S. experts chosen.

Deliverable 3(b)(i): Thematic assessment on land degradation and restoration assessment experts

Chapter 3: Direct and indirect drivers of land degradation and restoration

  • Nicole Barger (University of Colorado) – Coordinating Lead Author
  • Forest Isbell (University of Minnesota) – Lead Author (Land degradation and restoration assessment expert working as thematic experts within the four regional assessments)

Chapter 8: Decision support to address land degradation and support restoration of degraded land

  • Jayne Belnap (U.S. Geological Survey) – Lead Author (Land degradation and restoration assessment expert working as thematic experts within the four regional assessments)

 

For a complete list of U.S. experts currently serving on IPBES panels, please visit the U.S. engagement page.

Photo Credit: Royce Bair.

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IPBES: global collaboration on biodiversity and ecosystem services https://esa.org/ipbes/ipbes-global-collaboration-on-biodiversity-and-ecosystem-services/ https://esa.org/ipbes/ipbes-global-collaboration-on-biodiversity-and-ecosystem-services/#respond Wed, 03 Sep 2014 20:22:06 +0000 http://esa.org/ipbes/?p=139  

David Inouye is the incoming Ecological Society of America President. He is currently working on the IPBES Pollinators, Pollination and Food Production assessment. He explains the importance of IPBES in a guest editorial in the September 2014 issue of Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment which is reproduced below.

 

 

IPBES: global collaboration on biodiversity and ecosystem services

By David W Inouye

Ecologists conducted the research that has led to our understanding and appreciation of the biological and economic values of biodiversity. Our studies have also provided insights into how biodiversity and ecosystem services are being affected by human activities. This knowledge is now widely accepted in our profession, but we have been less successful in communicating the importance of these issues to the general public. Incorporating this knowledge into the political process so it feeds back into management decisions has been even more challenging.

Following on the largely successful model of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) – an international collaboration to study the scientific, technical, and socioeconomic aspects of human-induced climate change – a new intergovernmental body has recently emerged to review, assess, and critically evaluate available information about the state of the planet’s biodiversity and ecosystems, and the essential services they provide to society.

The roots of this effort go back to 2007, after which it quickly expanded to include both governmental and stakeholder participants, and elements of the Millennium Ecosystem Assessment. Subsequent intergovernmental and stakeholder meetings in Malaysia, Kenya, and South Korea resulted in the decision to establish an Intergovernmental Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services (IPBES; www.ipbes.net). In 2010, the General Assembly of the United Nations (UN) passed a resolution that required the UN Environment Programme to create IPBES as an independent intergovernmental body, and meetings during the next 2 years in Nairobi and Panama accomplished this task. Formally chartered in April 2012, IPBES is open to all member countries of the UN, and now has 118 members.

Spurred in part by concern about reports of declining pollinator populations in several parts of the world, IPBES recently initiated its first assessment: a fast-track thematic assessment of pollinators, pollination, and food production. It will evaluate recent changes in pollination as a regulating ecosystem service of importance for food production, in the context of its role in supporting a good quality of life as well as in biodiversity maintenance. Sixty-three participants – representing academia, government agencies, museums and herbaria, and industry – from 29 countries met for 5 days in Germany this summer to begin work on the six chapters that will constitute the group’s final report. This is the first of several efforts that have the objective of strengthening the science–policy interface of biodiversity and ecosystem services with regard to both thematic and methodological issues. Future assessments will consider land degradation and restoration, invasive alien species and their control, and sustainable use and conservation of biodiversity. Policy support tools, methodologies for scenario analysis, and modeling of biodiversity and ecosystem services will also be addressed, as will conceptualization of the value of biodiversity and nature’s benefits to people.

I’m very pleased that the Ecological Society of America (ESA) and its membership are playing important roles in IPBES. For example, ESA Past-President Ann Bartuska (Deputy Under Secretary for the US Department of Agriculture’s Research, Education, and Economics mission area) is involved as an IPBES leader. Subscribers to ECOLOG-L will have seen the latest calls for ecologists to participate in the IPBES assessments, given that ESA is managing the process of recruiting participants from the US. At the 2014 ESA Annual Meeting, there was a special session presenting an overview of IPBES, and two workshops about possibilities for participation and the ongoing pollination assessment. Two participants in the pollination project are ESA members, and other ESA members should consider nominating themselves or others for the additional assessments that IPBES will undertake soon. This is a great chance to collaborate with a very international group of colleagues. Some of you may be called upon to serve as reviewers as the reports are drafted, and I hope you will agree if you’re asked to contribute your expertise.

Just as the IPCC has had a huge effect on the science of climate change and policy related to it, I think IPBES has the potential to expand greatly – on a global scale – society’s appreciation of the importance and value of biodiversity and ecosystem services. IPBES also offers the chance to strengthen the capacity for effective use of science in policy making and decision making worldwide. Many ecologists are looking to broaden the impact of their disciplinary science expertise, either to satisfy requirements associated with federal funding or as one of their personal goals; hopefully, ESA members will take advantage of the golden opportunity that IPBES offers to apply their disciplinary skills in a policy framework.


Citation: David W Inouye 2014. IPBES: global collaboration on biodiversity and ecosystem services. Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment 12: 371–371. http://www.esajournals.org/doi/pdf/10.1890/1540-9295-12.7.371

Photo Credit: Elizabeth A. Sellers.

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