• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer

Worldwide network to enhance the science, policy and practice of ecosystem services for conservation and sustainable development

    • Log in
    • Newsletter
    • Contact
  • Community
    • Member Portal
    • ESP membership
      • Individual membership
      • Institutional membership
      • List of members
      • Member organisations
    • Working groups
      • Thematic Working Groups
        • TWG 1 – ES Assessment frameworks & Typologies
        • TWG 2 – Biodiversity & Ecosystem services
        • TWG 3 – ES Indicators
        • TWG 4 – Mapping ES
        • TWG 5 – Modeling ES
        • TWG 6 – Integrated valuation of ES
        • TWG 7 – Economic & Monetary valuation
        • TWG 8 – Cultural services & Values
        • TWG 9 – ES & Public health
        • TWG 10 – ES in Trade-off analysis & Project evaluation
        • TWG 11 – Global ES Flows
        • TWG 12 – ES & Disaster Risk reduction (DRR)
        • TWG 13 – Role of ES in Ecosystem restoration
          • TWG 13A – Biomimetic Solutions
        • TWG 14 – Application of ES in Planning & Management
        • TWG 15 – ES & Poverty alleviation
        • TWG 16 – ES Financing mechanisms (incl. PES)
          • TWG 16A – Tree-based PES (PESFOR-W)
        • TWG 17 – ES Accounting & Greening the economy
        • TWG 18 – Governance & Institutional aspects
        • TWG 19 – Big data & Digital communication
        • TWG 20 – Equity in Ecosystem Services research
      • Biome Working Groups
        • BWG 1 – Marine systems
        • BWG 2 – Freshwater systems
        • BWG 3 – Forests & Woodlands
        • BWG 4 – Drylands
        • BWG 5 – Mediterranean systems
        • BWG 6 – Deserts
        • BWG 7 – Tundras
        • BWG 8 – Polar regions & High mountains
        • BWG 9 – Rural landscapes
        • BWG 10 – Urban systems
      • Sectoral Working Groups
        • SWG 1 – ES in Agricultural production systems
        • SWG 2 – ES in Fishery & Aquaculture
        • SWG 3 – ES in Forestry production systems
        • SWG 4 – ES in Mining, Energy and Transport systems
        • SWG 5 – ES in Water management
        • SWG 6 – ES in Business
        • SWG 7 – ES in (eco) Tourism
        • SWG 8 – ES in Conservation
        • SWG 9 – Indigenous peoples & Local communities
        • SWG 10 – ES in the circular (bio-)economy
    • Regional chapters and National networks
      • North America
        • USA – NESP
        • Canada
      • Central America & Caribbean
        • A. Central America
          • Costa Rica
          • Guatemala
        • B. Caribbean
      • South America
        • Brazil
        • Colombia
        • Sur América – Español
      • West & Central Europe incl. Russia
        • Austria
        • Belgium
        • France
        • Germany
        • Italy
        • Luxembourg
        • Malta
        • Poland
        • Portugal
        • Slovenia
        • Spain
        • Switzerland
        • The Netherlands
      • South-East Europe
        • Bulgaria
        • Croatia
        • Cyprus
        • Greece – HESP
        • North Macedonia
        • Malta
        • Montenegro
        • Romania
        • Serbia – SESP
        • Turkey
      • MENA Middle East & North Africa
        • Israel
        • Jordan
        • Lebanon
      • West & Central Africa
        • Cameroon
        • DRC
        • Liberia
        • Senegal
        • Togo
      • East & Southern Africa
        • Kenya
        • South Africa
        • Zimbabwe
      • West & Central Asia
        • Kazakhstan
      • East Asia
        • China
        • Japan
        • Republic of Korea
      • South & South-East Asia
        • India
        • Indonesia
      • Oceania
        • Australia
        • New Zealand
    • Task Forces
    • Young ES Specialists (YESS)
    • ESP Asia Regional Office
  • Services
    • Networking
    • Journals
    • Case studies & Key sites
    • Data & Knowledge sharing
    • Education & Training
      • ESP Webinar Series
    • Guidelines & Toolkits
    • Relevant newsletters
  • ESP Conferences
    • Regional conferences
    • World Conference 2025
    • Previous conferences
  • Partners
    • Partner organisations
    • Related networks
    • SELINA Project
    • ESMERALDA Project
    • Become a partner
  • Sponsors
    • Become a sponsor
    • Become a member organisation
  • News
    • ESP Update
    • Latest news
    • Events
    • Vacancies
  • About
    • Governance
      • Interim Executive Committee
      • Executive Committee
      • Steering Committee
      • Issue commissions
      • Advisory board
    • Media & ESP
      • Acknowledgements
    • Foundation for Sustainable Development
    • Privacy Policy and Disclaimer

Clear goals but murky path to ecosystem sustainability: Knowledge gaps identified from international biodiversity assessments

November 15, 2019 by Iskra Categories: News, Publications

To overcome current biodiversity loss, new study identifies need for better knowledge on effective governance, institutions, and connections between social and ecological systems.    

International sustainability policies set out clear goals for protecting ecosystems and biodiversity, but how to actually achieve these goals remains elusive in practice, as biodiversity loss continues at an alarming rate. A new study published in the journal Nature Sustainability by an international team of 32 scientists identifies key knowledge gaps that need to be answered to tackle the root causes of biodiversity loss, and calls for more relevant, solutions-focused research that can address the social-ecological crisis.

The new study identifies knowledge gaps from seven recent assessments by the leading scientific body IPBES, the Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services. The IPBES assessments  synthesize current knowledge about the relationship between people and nature, including humans’ role in managing ecosystems to provide benefits to people. IPBES reports are a critical tool both to inform evidence-based policymaking and to set scientific research agendas.

The authors compared the knowledge gaps identified in the seven IPBES reports to key international sustainability goals set out by the United Nations for both the Aichi Biodiversity Targets, agreed in 2010 under the Convention on Biological Diversity, and the Sustainable Development Goals, agreed in 2015.

“We found that global sustainability goals cannot be achieved without improved knowledge on feedbacks between social and ecological systems, and on effective governance systems and institutions that can equitably deliver ecosystem services and protect vulnerable people,” says Matias Mastrangelo, researcher at the National University of Mar del Plata in Argentina, who led the study. “We need to identify management and policy strategies for ecosystems and biodiversity that are effective, just, inclusive, and promote good quality of life.”

The analysis found that progress has been made towards closing some previous knowledge gaps identified in the 2005 Millennium Ecosystem Assessment, including better understanding of long-term trends in ecological change. Still, after decades of research, some knowledge gaps remain, and new ones have emerged.

“We’ve made great strides forward in global assessments. But the most urgent research gap hasn’t changed since 2005: we need effective strategies to meet our sustainability goals,” says coauthor Elena Bennett, Associate Professor at the McGill School of Environment in Canada. “Additionally, in this latest assessment, the role of indigenous and local knowledge to sustain nature’s benefits to people has emerged as a key knowledge gap. Now we need to get those with deep expertise in social change and governance to the table, including local actors and decision makers.”

Along these lines, the IPBES assessments reflect a growing consensus for the need for new ways to value both human well-being and biodiversity protection. Coauthor Kimberly Nicholas, Associate Professor of Sustainability Science at Lund University in Sweden, notes the new assessments mark an emerging paradigm shift: “The emphasis we found on the importance of human values and institutions puts people at the heart of nature protection. To support decisions that ensure both people and nature can thrive, we need new ways to value human and natural well-being, beyond defining a good life based just on gross domestic product.”

Finally, the authors argue that the knowledge gaps they identified should be an important input for the new global biodiversity targets set to be adopted in 2020 under the United Nations Framework Convention on Biodiversity. “Researchers, research funders, and policymakers need to urgently focus on improving knowledge about the gaps identified, particularly in regions where this knowledge is currently lacking,” concludes study author Natalia Perez Harguindeguy, Professor at the National University of Córdoba in Argentina and researcher at the National Research Council of Argentina. “The future of humanity depends on how we respond to the current social-ecological crisis.”

The study, “Key knowledge gaps to achieve global sustainability goals,” is published in Nature Sustainability on 28 October 2019. (DOI: 10.1038/s41893-019-0412-1, https://www.nature.com/articles/s41893-019-0412-1)

Translations of this press release are available in: Spanish, French, German, and Swedish.

Contacts:

 

Matias Mastrangelo, PhD

Investigador Adjunto CONICET

Grupo de Estudio de Agroecosistemas y Paisajes Rurales

Universidad Nacional de Mar del Plata

Phone: (+54) 223-4497349

[email protected]

 

Prof. Dr. Natalia Perez Harguindeguy

Profesora Titular Biogeografía-FCEFyN (UNC) & Investigadora Independiente IMBIV (CONICET-UNC)

Av. Vélez Sarsfield 1611 (X5016GCA)-Ciudad Universitaria. Cordoba. Argentina.

Phone: (+54) 351 153560314

[email protected]

 

Elena M. Bennett, PhD

Associate Professor

Natural Resource Sciences and

McGill School of Environment

Phone: (+1) 514-803-3474

http://bennettlab.weebly.com

Twitter: @ElenaBennett

[email protected]

 

Kimberly Nicholas, PhD

Associate Professor of Sustainability Science

Lund University Centre for Sustainability Studies (LUCSUS)
Phone: (+46) 46 222 6812

[email protected]

Twitter: @KA_Nicholas

http://www.kimnicholas.com/

 

Primary Sidebar

Become a member!

Subscribe to newsletter

Already a member? Login below:


Forgot Password

Follow us on:

Footer

Regional Chapters

  • North America
  • Central America & Caribbean
  • South America
  • West & Central Europe incl. Russia
  • South-East Europe
  • MENA Middle East & North Africa
  • West & Central Africa
  • East & Southern Africa
  • West & Central Asia
  • East Asia
  • South & South-East Asia
  • Oceania

Working Groups

  • Thematic Working Groups
  • Biome Working Groups
  • Sectoral Working Groups

Follow us on:

Copyright © 2025 · Foundation for Sustainable Development · Privacy Policy and Disclaimer · Log in · Implemented by Co-Capacity

We use cookies to ensure that we give you the best experience on our website. If you continue to use this site we will assume that you are happy with it.OkRead more