Biodiversity accounting in life cycle assessment – a novel method
Zulka, K. P. (2018). Biodiversity accounting in life cycle assessment – a novel method. 5th European Congress of Conservation Biology. doi: 10.17011/conference/eccb2018/107845
Tekijät
Päivämäärä
2018Tekijänoikeudet
© the Authors, 2018
Biodiversity accounting in life cycle assessment – a novel method
Life cycle assessment (LCA) of products may be an indispensable tool in the transition towards a sustainable lifestyle and planetary wellbeing – but parameter evaluation has often been limited to greenhouse gas emissions and inclusion of biodiversity effects has shown to be notoriously difficult. I developed a new and universally applicable method for biodiversity accounting in LCAs. The biodiversity effect measure BE quantifies the change in extinction risk of all species in an assemblage as a result of a land use change or some other kind of external influence impinging on the species, summed across the assemblage. It consists of four components, impact overlap IOi, population impact PIi, national and international Red List risk categories (PEnat, i; PEint, i), and a concentration measure Ci. Impact overlap IOi quantifies the spatial relationship between impact area and species range. Population impact PIi specifies the degree and direction of the land use change consequences for a population of the species i within the impact area. The use of national and international Red List categories is based on the consideration that extinction risk change owing to land use change intervention depends on extinction risk in the first place – the first derivative of an exponential function is also an exponential function. Finally, the effect on a particular species depends on the concentration of populations Ci in the impact area; the more a species is restricted to the impact habitat and impact area, the higher the quantitative weight of the species within the assemblage. The measure BE, accounting for biodiversity effects in a standardized area, is then obtained by summing up the values obtained for single species. To obtain universally comparable values, the quantification method is currently restricted to mammals, birds, amphibians and reptiles, organism groups for which Red List categorizations are largely complete and ecological information is in most cases easily accessible.
The method can be applied both to subtle local changes in land use intensity and to large-scale or global product comparisons, as three application examples show. The first example quantifies the biodiversity effects of setting aside field margins as flower strips in Central Europe. The second example compares the biodiversity effects of conventionally grown potatoes and potatoes from organic agriculture. The third example quantifies the biodiversity effects of soybeans cultivated in Austria with those cultivated in Brazil based on several land use change scenarios.
Reduction of the equations developed for the general case – biodiversity accounting in LCAs – makes the method applicable to special cases, for example biodiversity accounting in monitoring or Environmental Impact Assessment.
...
Julkaisija
Open Science Centre, University of JyväskyläKonferenssi
ECCB2018: 5th European Congress of Conservation Biology. 12th - 15th of June 2018, Jyväskylä, Finland
Alkuperäislähde
https://peerageofscience.org/conference/eccb2018/107845/Metadata
Näytä kaikki kuvailutiedotKokoelmat
- ECCB 2018 [712]
Lisenssi
Samankaltainen aineisto
Näytetään aineistoja, joilla on samankaltainen nimeke tai asiasanat.
-
Accounting for global drivers in landscape-level assessments of biodiversity and ecosystem services
Eggers, Jeannette; Eriksson, Ljusk Ola; Nordström, Eva-Maria; Snäll, Tord (Open Science Centre, University of Jyväskylä, 2018)Wood production is a pivotal provisioning ecosystem service of major economic importance, yet its intensive utilization is a key reason for species declines in the EU and globally. A transition from a fossil- to a bio-based ... -
Integrating financial, carbon and biodiversity footprint accounting in organizations
El Geneidy, Sami (Jyväskylän yliopisto, 2024)Ilmastonmuutos ja luontokato heikentävät hyvän elämän perusedellytyksiä maapallolla. Organisaatiot, kuten yritykset, julkiset instituutiot ja yhdistykset, ovat yhteiskuntamme peruspilareita. Hiili- ja luontojalanjäljen ... -
The Austrian biodiversity monitoring “ÖBM Kulturlandschaft” and a unified biodiversity number for trend assessments
Schindler, Stefan; Zulka, Klaus Peter; Banko, Gebhard; Moser, Dietmar; Grillmayer, Roland; Rabitsch, Wolfgang; Essl, Franz; Paternoster, David; Staudinger, Markus; Zuna-Kratky, Thomas; Gallmetzer, Nina; Pascher, Kathrin; Stejskal-Tiefenbach, Maria (Open Science Centre, University of Jyväskylä, 2018)The Austrian biodiversity monitoring ÖBM-Kulturlandschaft has a focus on habitat and species diversity in Austrian cultural landscapes (including alpine pastures) and started in the year 2017. The stratified random selection ... -
Accountability in couple therapy for depression : a mixed methods study in a naturalistic setting in Finland
Kuhlman, Ilpo (University of Jyväskylä, 2013) -
Global-scale assessment of forest management impacts on biodiversity patterns
Kusumoto, Buntarou; Aakala, Tuomas; Kuuluvainen, Timo; Shiono, Takayuki; Kubota, Yasuhiro (Open Science Centre, University of Jyväskylä, 2018)Integrating biodiversity conservation into forest management has been highlighted as one of the means for halting and reversing the recent biodiversity loss. This integration requires that we understand the mechanistic ...
Ellei toisin mainittu, julkisesti saatavilla olevia JYX-metatietoja (poislukien tiivistelmät) saa vapaasti uudelleenkäyttää CC0-lisenssillä.