Mapping ecosystem services provided by wetlands at multiple spatiotemporal scales : a case study in Quebec, Canada

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Publication date
2019Author(s)
Varin, Mathieu; Théau, Jérôme; Fournier, Richard
Subject
WetlandAbstract
Abstract : Wetlands are affected by climate and anthropogenic changes, which influence the ecosystem services (ES) they provide. This study presents a spatially explicit quantification of wetland ESs. The study site is the Yamaska river watershed located in Quebec, Canada. The proposed approach includes four main steps: (1) statistical selection of function indicators (FI) to build a composite ecosystem service indicator (ESI); (2) temporal land use mapping for past (1984), recent (2011) and future scenarios (2050); (3) mapping and quantification of FIs and ESIs at all temporal and spatial scales; and (4) synthesis of multispatial and multitemporal information using a diagram representation. Results present the spatiotemporal evolution of the maintaining habitat ES provided by wetlands in the studied watershed. The historical characterization shows a general degradation of this service on the entire territory for the last 30 years. Multi-scale analyses can target priority sectors in which this service has deteriorated or is lacking. Future scenarios show the urgency to act in order to preserve currently intact areas because even the optimistic scenario indicates that the studied ES would not return to its 1984 state. Finally, the synthesis analysis provides a decision support tool adapted to territory managers. Thus, this study shows that the proposed multi-scale method is reproducible, robust and that it provides simple procedures to assess ES over time and space.
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