Published August 14, 2021 | Version v1
Journal article Open

Applying the Human Appropriation of Net Primary Production framework to map provisioning ecosystem services and their relation to ecosystem functioning across the European Union

  • 1. Institute of Social Ecology, University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences (Boku)
  • 2. MARETEC – Marine, Environment and Technology Centre, Instituto Superior T´ecnico, LARSyS, Universidade de Lisboa
  • 3. European Commission, Joint Research Centre, Ispra

Description

Abstract:

Human intervention on land enhances the supply of provisioning ecosystem services, but also exerts pressures on ecosystem functioning. We utilize the Human Appropriation of Net Primary Production (HANPP) framework to assess these relations in European agriculture, for 220 NUTS2 regions. We put a particular focus on individual land system components, i.e. croplands, grasslands, and livestock husbandry and relate associated biomass flows to the potential net primary productivity NPP. For the reference year 2012, we find that 469 g dm/m2/yr (38% of NPPpot) of used biomass were harvested on total agricultural land, and that one tonne of annually harvested biomass is associated with 1.67 tonnes dry matter (dm) of HANPP, ranging from 0.8 to 8.1 tonnes dry matter (dm) across all regions. EU livestock systems are a large consumer of these provisioning ecosystem services, and invoking higher HANPP flows than current HANPP on cropland and grassland within the EU, even exceeding the potential NPP in one fifth of all NUTS2 regions. NPP remaining in ecosystems after provisioning society with biomass is essential for the functioning of ecosystems and is 563 g dm/m2/yr or 46% of NPPpot on all agricultural land. We conclude from our analysis that the HANPP framework provides useful indicators that should be integrated in future ecosystem service assessments.

Notes

We gratefully acknowledge funding from the European Union's Horizon 2020 programme under GA Nr. 773901 "Understanding and improving the sustainability of agro-ecological farming systems in the EU" (UNISECO), and the Austrian Ministry for Sustainability and tourism under the European Research NETwork on Sustainable Animal Production (ERA-NET SusAn), Project 101243 "Steering Animal Production Systems towards Sustainable Future" (AnimalFuture), funded by the Horizon 2020 Program of the European Union (SusAn/0001/2016). T. Morais was supported by grant SFRH/BD/115407/2016 from Fundaç˜ao para a Ciˆencia e Tecnologia.

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Mayer et al 2021 Ecosystem Services 51 101344.pdf

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Additional details

Funding

UNISECO – Understanding and improving the sustainability of agro-ecological farming systems in the EU 773901
European Commission