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Featured researches published by Jakub Kronenberg.


Ecology and Society | 2016

Key insights for the future of urban ecosystem services research

Peleg Kremer; Zoé A. Hamstead; Dagmar Haase; Timon McPhearson; Niki Frantzeskaki; Erik Andersson; Nadja Kabisch; Neele Larondelle; Emily Lorance Rall; Annette Voigt; Francesc Baró; Christine Bertram; Erik Gómez-Baggethun; Rieke Hansen; Anna Kaczorowska; Jaan-Henrik Kain; Jakub Kronenberg; Johannes Langemeyer; Stephan Pauleit; Katrin Rehdanz; Maria Schewenius; Chantal van Ham; Daniel Wurster; Thomas Elmqvist

Understanding the dynamics of urban ecosystem services is a necessary requirement for adequate planning, management, and governance of urban green infrastructure. Through the three-year Urban Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services (URBES) research project, we conducted case study and comparative research on urban biodiversity and ecosystem services across seven cities in Europe and the United States. Reviewing > 50 peer-reviewed publications from the project, we present and discuss seven key insights that reflect cumulative findings from the project as well as the state-of-the-art knowledge in urban ecosystem services research. The insights from our review indicate that cross-sectoral, multiscale, interdisciplinary research is beginning to provide a solid scientific foundation for applying the ecosystem services framework in urban areas and land management. Our review offers a foundation for seeking novel, nature-based solutions to emerging urban challenges such as wicked environmental change issues.


Ecology and Society | 2013

Could Payments for Ecosystem Services Create an "Ecosystem Service Curse"?

Jakub Kronenberg; Klaus Hubacek

Payments for ecosystem services (PES) have received much praise and are increasingly perceived as a promising tool to ensure the protection of global ecosystems as well as being able to help alleviate poverty in areas rich in ecosystem services. Given current trends, the scale of payments is likely to grow, creating new circumstances within which ecosystem services will be managed. In this dynamic context, following a precautionary approach, one should focus on establishing systems to handle the risks involved. Based on an analogy to resources that have long been included in the system of market transactions, we suggest that the rapid development of PES can negatively influence regional and potentially national economies. Resource revenues are highly correlated with economic problems in poor countries that are not able to use those revenues to ensure sound development. Problems similar to those that affect resource-rich countries may emerge in the case of economies rich in ecosystem services once PES increase in spatial and monetary scale. The most prominent examples of such problems include rent seeking, unequal bargaining power of buyers and sellers, volatility of payments, which are all related to the quality of institutions. To ensure the long-term positive impacts of PES, such systems should be carefully designed paying particular attention to distribution of property rights and transparency, decentralization of revenues, and capacity building to ensure further development opportunities.


AMBIO: A Journal of the Human Environment | 2014

From Valuation to Governance: Using Choice Experiment to Value Street Trees

Marek Giergiczny; Jakub Kronenberg

This paper reports a choice experiment used to estimate the value of street trees in the city center of Lodz, Poland, and the broader context of how valuation results helped to improve governance of urban ecosystem services in this city. Based on a simplified inventory of trees, we prepared a set of hypothetical programs which put varying emphasis on the different ways to increase the numbers of trees, along with different levels of a hypothetical tax that would have to be paid by respondents to implement a given program. Our study indicated that the 351 surveyed Lodz residents were willing to pay the highest price for greening those streets where currently there are few or no trees and confirmed the general importance of planting trees. The results provided an argument in the debate on the new development strategy for the city and helped to promote the concept of ecosystem services.


Simulation & Gaming | 2007

Role-playing simulation as a communication tool in community dialogue: Karkonosze mountains case study

Karolina Krolikowska; Jakub Kronenberg; Karolina Maliszewska; Jan Sendzimir; Piotr Magnuszewski; Andrzej Dunajski; Anna Slodka

This article describes a process of role-playing simulation (RPS) as it was used during an educational exercise in community dialogue in the Karkonosze Mountains region of southwest Poland. Over the past decade Karkonosze National Park, a regional tourist magnet, has provided an excellent example of environmental conflict emerging from the tensions between nature protection and economic development. The project we describe herein, a course called “Dynamics of Sustainable Development,” was designed to give students the direct experience of challenges in solving difficult social-ecological problems with many linked conflicts and tensions. We focused on RPS to emphasize factors crucial to compromise. Because teaching students about conflict solving was our main objective, the second indirect but expected experience was to stimulate discussions among real stakeholders. Although RPS itself was not performed in the presence of the real stakeholders, their participation was ensured by inviting them for a final public debate where they got a chance to express their opinions about what they heard from the students. RPS offered the course participants not only a closer look at the conflict in the Karkonosze related to sustainable development, but also an insight into the general psychological background and evolution of conflicts.


Ecosystems | 2016

Insurance Value of Green Infrastructure in and Around Cities

Tom L. Green; Jakub Kronenberg; Erik Andersson; Thomas Elmqvist; Erik Gómez-Baggethun

The combination of climate change and urbanization projected to occur until 2050 poses new challenges for land-use planning, not least in terms of reducing urban vulnerability to hazards from projected increases in the frequency and intensity of climate extremes. Interest in investments in green infrastructure (interconnected systems of parks, wetlands, gardens and other green spaces), as well as in restoration of urban ecosystems as part of such adaptation strategies, is growing worldwide. Previous research has highlighted the insurance value of ecosystems in securing the supply of ecosystem services in the face of disturbance and change, yet this literature neglects urban areas even though urban populations are often highly vulnerable. We revisit the insurance value literature to examine the applicability of the concept in urban contexts, illustrating it with two case studies: watersheds providing drinking water for residents of Vancouver, Canada; and private gardens ensuring connectedness between other parts of urban green infrastructure in London, UK. Our research supports the notion that investments in green infrastructure can enhance insurance value, reducing vulnerability and the costs of adaptation to climate change and other environmental change. Although we recommend that urban authorities consider the insurance value of ecosystems in their decision-making matrix, we advise caution in relying upon monetary evaluations of insurance value. We conclude by identifying actions and management strategies oriented to maintain or enhance the insurance value of urban ecosystems. Ecosystems that are themselves resilient to external disturbances are better able to provide insurance for broader social–ecological systems.


Environmental Management | 2014

Environmental Impacts of the Use of Ecosystem Services: Case Study of Birdwatching

Jakub Kronenberg

The main reason for promoting the concept of ecosystem services lies in its potential to contribute to environmental conservation. Highlighting the benefits derived from ecosystems fosters an understanding of humans’ dependence on nature, as users of ecosystem services. However, the act of using ecosystem services may not be environmentally neutral. As with the use of products and services generated within an economy, the use of ecosystem services may lead to unintended environmental consequences throughout the ‘ecosystem services supply chain.’ This article puts forward a framework for analyzing environmental impacts related to the use of ecosystem services, indicating five categories of impact: (1) direct impacts (directly limiting the service’s future availability); and four categories of indirect impacts, i.e., on broader ecosystem structures and processes, which can ultimately also affect the initial service: (2) impacts related to managing ecosystems to maximize the delivery of selected services (affecting ecosystems’ capacity to provide other services); (3) impacts associated with accessing ecosystems to use their services (affecting other ecosystem components); (4) additional consumption of products, infrastructure or services required to use a selected ecosystem service, and their life-cycle environmental impacts; and (5) broader impacts on the society as a whole (environmental awareness of ecosystem service users and other stakeholders). To test the usefulness of this framework, the article uses the case study of birdwatching, which demonstrates all of the above categories of impacts. The article justifies the need for a broader consideration of environmental impacts related to the use of ecosystem services.


Progress in Industrial Ecology, An International Journal | 2006

Industrial ecology and ecological economics

Jakub Kronenberg

The editors of this journal initiated a discussion on the relationship between industrial ecology and ecological economics, to which the current article is intended to contribute. It consists of overviews of ecological economics and industrial ecology, followed by an analysis of the links between them. Judging from their theoretical background and historical development, the extent of cross referencing between them, their shared normative characters and the particular focus of industrial ecology on industry and products, the article suggests that not only are they closely related, but also that ecological economics is relatively broader and, thus, encompasses industrial ecology.


Sustainability Science | 2016

From poverty trap to ecosystem service curse

Jakub Kronenberg; Klaus Hubacek

In spite of broad and positive expectations, payments for ecosystem services (PES) can bring about unexpected and negative consequences, especially in terms of their impacts on the well-being of local communities dependent on ecosystems. Based on numerous observations of recurring problems with PES, we put forward an ecosystem service curse hypothesis (Kronenberg and Hubacek in Ecol Soc 18:art.10. doi:10.5751/ES-05240-180110, 2013), that points to counterintuitive negative development outcomes for countries and regions rich in ecosystem services. The social and economic problems that we have been able to depict in many PES schemes reflect the persistence of maladaptive states in pursuit of sustainability. Instead of providing an opportunity to break out of poverty, these problems reflect entrapment, which is most often related to poor quality of institutions. Here we highlight the linkages between the ecosystem service curse hypothesis and the dynamic system stability landscapes discussed in this special issue. Our article consists of three parts in which we: (1) present the original ecosystem service curse hypothesis; (2) link this hypothesis to the broader discussions relevant to sustainability science; and (3) highlight the context of traps on which this special feature focuses.


Journal of Ecotourism | 2016

Birdwatchers’ wonderland? Prospects for the development of birdwatching tourism in Poland

Jakub Kronenberg

Prominent books on birdwatching and ornithology refer to Poland as one of the best places for birdwatching. This study looks more specifically into the strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and threats (SWOTs) of developing birdwatching tourism (avitourism) in Poland. These are identified and ranked based on a survey of three expert groups involved in birdwatching and birdwatching tourism in Poland – international tour operators, international researchers, and Polish researchers. The analysis of these stakeholders’ views complements the more frequently offered analyses of birdwatchers’ motivations, in that it allows us to depict the broader context of birdwatching tourism. Based on the present study, Polands most important strengths include its abundance of bird species and natural unspoilt ecosystems, while the main weaknesses refer to underdeveloped tourist infrastructure and insufficient information about Polish birdwatching sites. Consequently, improving the tourist infrastructure and information on birdwatching opportunities in Poland emerge as the most important opportunities, and environmental degradation as the most important threat. Several interesting differences among the three expert groups provide a more nuanced picture. Based on such a SWOT analysis, recommendations are also offered regarding sustainable management of birdwatching tourism in Poland, and more broadly on how to enhance the attractiveness of an area for birdwatchers.


Archive | 2013

Regional Assessment of Europe

Jakub Kronenberg; Azime Tezer; Dagmar Haase; Johan Colding

In many of the areas presently occupied by European cities, settlements were formed already in Neolithic times, when the continent was colonized by agriculturalists (9500 B.C. onwards). The re-colonization of European plants and animals after the last Ice Age, which covered large areas of Europe, was not completed before human influence began to cause local disturbances, meaning that the native biodiversity has evolved under human influence. The long history of urban development in Europe, and the location of cities in fertile river valleys, are at least two reasons of why many European cities are often characterized by higher species richness of plants and animals than some of the surrounding rural areas. The long history of co-evolution may be a particular factor explaining why European plants and animals worldwide tend to successfully establish in areas with dense human population.

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Dagmar Haase

Humboldt University of Berlin

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Piotr Tryjanowski

Adam Mickiewicz University in Poznań

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Tomasz Bergier

AGH University of Science and Technology

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Anna Kaczorowska

Chalmers University of Technology

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Jaan-Henrik Kain

Chalmers University of Technology

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Nadja Kabisch

Humboldt University of Berlin

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