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The ecosystem approach to environmental assessment:
moving from theory to practice
Frederick J. Wrona & Kevin J. Cash
National Hydrology Research Institute (Environment Canada),
11 Innovation Blvd., Saskatoon, SK S7N 3H5, Canada
Email: wronaj@nhrisv.nhrc.sk.doe.ca
(Received 10 February 1995; accepted
in revised form 8 January 1996)
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Abstract
The "ecosystem approach" to environmental
management is viewed by many as being fundamental to the development
of appropriate management strategies. While this approach represents
a major advance in the way researchers view environmental assessment,
the approach in itself does not provide practical information as
to what questions to ask and what tools to use in assessing and
managing ecosystems. Similarly, the concept of ecosystem health,
as it is usually defined, has little practical value for ecosystem
managers. We suggest the next stage in environmental assessment
will be the development of specific frameworks designed to assess
individual ecosystems. Of primary importance is the need to consider
the basic structure and function of the ecosystem itself. Such consideration,
together with explicit identification of anthropogenic stresses
particular to the system, serves to identify those components most
at risk and those issues most deserving of attention. Researchers
should explore critical linkages between environmental stressors
and their observable, measurable and predictable effects on ecological
parameters and use this understanding to develop a management strategy
that incorporates appropriate ecological indicators. The importance
of these considerations will be illustrated using examples from
the Northern River Basins Study.
Keywords: ecosystem health, ecological indicators, environmental
assessment
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