Quantification and mapping of flood regulating ecosystem services in different watersheds -case studies in Bulgaria and Arizona, USA
- authored by
- Kremena Boyanova, Stoyan Nedkov, Benjamin Burkhard
- Abstract
There is great need for accurate and practical methods to assess the conditions of ecosystems, and the possible results of their interaction with social systems. The generation and interpretation of quantitative data for ecosystem service analysis is still not well established. Ecosystem service analyses demand an interdisciplinary approach that integrates knowledge with a high variety, and manifold verifications, of models and data. Maps seem to be the most preferable tool for the visualisation of results, being a comprehensive and intuitive tool for communication between decision makers and the general public. The following chapter presents an application and the verification of an approach for the quantification of flood regulating ecosystem services by using results from the watershed hydrological model KINEROS and the AGWA tool (Nedkov and Burkhard 2012). It is applied in six watersheds -three in Bulgaria and three in Arizona, USA, in order to check its reliability in case studies with differing geographic characteristics. The model results are used to define the capacities of the land cover classes in the different watersheds and to prepare flood regulating supply capacity maps. Capacities for flood regulation differ within the case studies and their land cover classes. Forests still show generally high capacities in both Bulgaria and Arizona, while grasslands and pastures in Bulgaria show higher capacities for flood regulation than in Arizona. The maps can provide valuable information for sustainable environmental management.
- External Organisation(s)
-
Bulgarian Academy of Sciences (BAS)
Kiel University
- Type
- Conference article
- Journal
- Lecture Notes in Geoinformation and Cartography
- Pages
- 237-255
- No. of pages
- 19
- ISSN
- 1863-2351
- Publication date
- 2014
- Publication status
- Published
- Peer reviewed
- Yes
- ASJC Scopus subject areas
- Civil and Structural Engineering, Geography, Planning and Development, Earth-Surface Processes, Computers in Earth Sciences
- Sustainable Development Goals
- SDG 15 - Life on Land
- Electronic version(s)
-
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-08180-9_18 (Access:
Closed)