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People in Ecosystems/Watershed Integration (PEWI): A dynamic land-use and ecosystem service tradeoffs assessment tool.

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Presentation on theme: "People in Ecosystems/Watershed Integration (PEWI): A dynamic land-use and ecosystem service tradeoffs assessment tool."— Presentation transcript:

1 People in Ecosystems/Watershed Integration (PEWI): A dynamic land-use and ecosystem service tradeoffs assessment tool

2 Why PEWI? How agriculture can produce outcomes that society desires How we can learn – Complex social-ecological relationships – Ecosystem service tradeoffs How we can facilitate urban-rural dialogue

3 An analogy The analogy of a sandbox is a great way to think about PEWI Why a sandbox?

4 Friends and a sandbox

5 The right tools and a design

6 The finished product…until

7 Create something new

8 What if there were a virtual “sandbox” to explore humans, land use, and ecosystem service in a watershed?

9 PEWI is that sandbox Fun, simple, and accurate Explore land uses and ecosystem services without technical expertise or the costs of experimenting in the real world

10 Introduce PEWI Models how changes in land use and management result in tradeoffs in the levels of ecosystem services outcomes in a fictional Iowa agricultural watershed

11 Introduce PEWI Models how changes in land use and management result in tradeoffs in the levels of ecosystem services outcomes in a fictional Iowa agricultural watershed 4 concepts: 1.Land use and management 2.Watershed 3.Tradeoffs 4.Ecosystem Services

12 1. Land uses and management

13 2. What is a watershed? When water hits land, runoff drains to a stream, lake, or larger waterway. A watershed is the area of land where all of the water that is under it or drains off of it goes into the same place.

14 3. What are ecosystem services? Ecosystem services are “the conditions and processes through which natural ecosystems, and the species that make them up, sustain and fulfil human life” (Daily, 1997). Ecosystem services are “the benefits people obtain from ecosystems. These include provisioning services such as food and water; regulating services such as flood and disease control; cultural services such as spiritual, recreational, and cultural benefits; and supporting services, such as nutrient cycling, that maintain the conditions for life on Earth” (UNEP, Millennium Assessment Reports).

15 Modified, with additions, from the Millennium Assessment Supporting Services  Biodiversity & Ecosystem Functions  Nutrient Cycling | Evolution | Soil Formation | Spatial Structure | Primary Production Provisioning Services Food Fresh Water Fuel Wood Fiber Biochemicals Genetic Resources Regulating Services Climate regulation Disease regulation Water regulation Water purification Pollination Cultural Services Spiritual & religious Recreation Ecotourism Aesthetic Inspirational Educational Sense of place Cultural heritage

16 4. Tradeoffs among ecosystem services Adapted from Foley et al. (2005). Photos from Iowa DNR (left), USDA NRCS (middle), and Sarah Hirsh (right)

17 www.nrem.iastate.edu/pewi

18 PEWI land uses

19 PEWI physical feature maps

20 Behind the scenes 7 modules in PE/WI  16 ES indicators – Biodiversity – Game Wildlife – Carbon Sequestration – Nitrate – Phosphorus – Erosion & Sedimentation – Yield

21 PEWI results

22

23 User designs

24 Compare two designs

25 Check PEWI out online PEWI Companion Website – http://www.nrem.iastate.edu/pewinrem.iastate.edu/pewi PEWI App – http://www.nrem.iastate.edu/pewi/appnrem.iastate.edu/pewi/app Iowa State University Project Leaders – Prof. Lisa Schulte Moore lschulte@iastate.edulschulte@iastate.edu – Prof. John Tyndall jtyndall@iastate.edujtyndall@iastate.edu – Carrie Chennault carriemc@iastate.educarriemc@iastate.edu


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