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  2. Ecosystem service - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ecosystem_service

    An example of an ecosystem service is pollination, here by a honey bee on avocado crop. Ecosystem services are the various benefits that humans derive from healthy ecosystems. These ecosystems, when functioning well, offer such things as provision of food, natural pollination of crops, clean air and water, decomposition of wastes, or flood ...

  3. Payment for ecosystem services - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Payment_for_ecosystem_services

    The basic conceptualization of nature from the perspective of environmental economics is that manufactured capital can be used as a substitute for natural capital. [13] The definition of PES provided by environmental economics is the most popular: a voluntary transaction between a service buyer and service seller that takes place on the condition that either a specific ecosystem service is ...

  4. Ecosystem management - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ecosystem_management

    A fundamental concern of ecosystem management is the long-term sustainability of the production of goods and services by ecosystems, [9] as "intergenerational sustainability [is] a precondition for management, not an afterthought."

  5. Ecological goods and services - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ecological_goods_and_services

    Examples of ecological goods include clean air, and abundant fresh water.Examples of ecological services include purification of air and water, maintenance of biodiversity, decomposition of wastes, soil and vegetation generation and renewal, pollination of crops and natural vegetation, groundwater recharge through wetlands, seed dispersal, greenhouse gas mitigation, and aesthetically pleasing ...

  6. Ecological facilitation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ecological_facilitation

    Ecological facilitation or probiosis describes species interactions that benefit at least one of the participants and cause harm to neither. [1] Facilitations can be categorized as mutualisms, in which both species benefit, or commensalisms, in which one species benefits and the other is unaffected.

  7. Mass provisioning - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mass_provisioning

    Mass provisioning is a form of parental investment [1] in which an adult insect, most commonly a hymenopteran such as a bee or wasp, stocks all the food for each of her offspring in a small chamber (a "cell") before she lays the egg.

  8. Progressive provisioning - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Progressive_provisioning

    Progressive provisioning is a term used in entomology to refer to a form of parental behavior in which an adult (most commonly a hymenopteran such as a bee or wasp) feeds its larvae directly after they have hatched, feeding each larva repeatedly until it has completed development.

  9. Provisioning (technology) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Provisioning_(technology)

    In telecommunications, provisioning involves the process of preparing and equipping a network to allow it to provide new services to its users. In National Security/Emergency Preparedness telecommunications services, "provisioning" equates to "initiation" and includes altering the state of an existing priority service or capability.