NIGK13007U Ecosystem Services from Forests and Nature
The course explores the variety of ecosystem services (ES) provided by forest and nature ecosystems. Focus will be on ecosystem functioning providing the services, ES assessment and quantification, valuation and decision-making. The following key topics are covered: (1) ES and the Millennium Ecosystem Assessment, classification of ES types, (2) carbon storage and sequestration, nitrogen retention and other services related to the biogeochemical cycles, (3) water quality and quantity, (4) primary productivity and environmental responses, (5) maintenance of soil fertility and effects of land management, (6) Biodiversity conservation, (7) Impacts of climate change on ES, (8) Economic methods and valuation of ES, (9) Trade-offs and synergies between ES, (10) Poverty and payment for ES, (11) Policy, priorities and decision-making.
This course focuses on enabling students’ ability to apply scientific knowledge and reasoning to critically assess, and discuss synergies and trade-offs.
Knowledge
- Understand categories and key contemporary issues on ecosystem services
- Understand ecosystem functioning leading to ES
- Understand interactions between ecosystem services and effects of utilization and conservation
- Understand underlying synergies and trade-offs between ecosystem services and how management can affect the provision of ES
- Understand the ecosystem services in relation to climate change
- Summarize environmental economic and policy theory and knowledge of the decision support tools utilized in management of ecosystem services
Skills
- Develop, quantify and apply theoretical and practical models and software for ecosystem service quantification
- Apply decision support tools to model, analyze, and prioritize the provision of ecosystem services
- Assess the possibilities and limitations of theories and methodologies
- Tackle problems by collecting, analyzing and evaluating appropriate qualitative and quantitative information and using it creatively
Competences
- Turn demands on ecosystem services into concrete priorities, potential actions and projects based on both natural and social science
- Transfer theories and principles to new situations and assume independent and professional responsibility
- Manage operations and development tasks in the framework set by society (legislation, regulations, realities)
- Display the competences, key skills ,behaviour and attitudes required in a professional working life
- Transfer problem analyses, theories, secondary data and analysis into priority suggestions, reflecting trade-offs and synergies as well as the objectives of multitudinous stakeholders
- Independently evaluate and structure own learning processes and assume responsibility for own professional development with a view to life-long learning
- Category
- Hours
- Exam
- 4
- Excursions
- 10
- Lectures
- 60
- Preparation
- 36
- Project work
- 60
- Theory exercises
- 36
- Total
- 206
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- Credit
- 7,5 ECTS
- Type of assessment
- Oral examinationOral exam includes examination of a project report (counts 50%) and a general question on the compulsory curriculum (count 50%)
- Exam registration requirements
- submission of project report
- Aid
- All aids allowed
- Marking scale
- 7-point grading scale
- Censorship form
- No external censorship
Én intern censor.
- Re-exam
- If 10 or fewer register for the reexamination the examination form will be oral.
Criteria for exam assesment
Course information
- Language
- English
- Course code
- NIGK13007U
- Credit
- 7,5 ECTS
- Level
- Full Degree Master
- Duration
- 1 block
- Placement
- Block 3
- Schedule
- B
- Continuing and further education
- Study board
- Study Board of Geosciences and Management
Contracting departments
- Department of Geoscience and Natural Resource Management
- Department of Food and Resource Economics
Course responsibles
- Karsten Raulund-Rasmussen (krr@ign.ku.dk)
- Niels Strange (nst@ifro.ku.dk)