Humans derive a large number of important benefits from natural ecosystems. Such ecosystems services include both direct benefits such as food, inspiration and improved mental well-being, income from recreation, and indirect benefits as flood and disease regulation.
Human dependence on ecosystems services is the tightest in developing regions of sub-Sahara Africa, where poverty reduces people’s capacity to capitalize on national resources other than those they can acquire from their direct surroundings, making people in developing countries much more sensitive to accelerated climate change than their developed counterparts. The resulting spiral of poverty exacerbated by increasing human populations, loss of natural habitats and biodiversity (climate change, land use change, overexploitation), deteriorate ecosystems services. Impairment of human welfare calls for innovative solutions that encompass the entire socio-ecological-economic system.
The aim of AfricanBioServices is to unravel how human population growth, land-use change and climate change affect human well-being. Firstly, the African continent harbors the fastest growing human population in the world. The pressure on natural resources in the Greater Serengeti-Mara Ecosystem (GSME) is increasing. Secondly, the agricultural and industrial development is modifying the way different areas are utilized, and in this ecosystem the natural landscape is changing quickly. Finally, the fast human population growth on the African continent, and the pressure on natural resources in the GSME is increasing. Based on this, AfricanBioServices aim to use data to develop novel sustainable solutions to achieve the twin goals of biodiversity protection and the improvement of benefits that people derive from the unique ecosystems within the region.
The available data to reach this aim are difficult to access, preventing them from being used to assist in interpretation on the status of biodiversity and livelihoods. There is also a need to identify and fill gaps in existing data by collecting new field data. The ultimate goal of AfricanBioServices is to bring together all existing and new data in a centralized database, which is user friendly and can be accessed by the scientific community, conservationists, and general public in the future.