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Stephanie A. Tomscha
Researcher at Victoria University of Wellington
Publications - 19
Citations - 519
Stephanie A. Tomscha is an academic researcher from Victoria University of Wellington. The author has contributed to research in topics: Ecosystem services & Wetland. The author has an hindex of 9, co-authored 16 publications receiving 336 citations. Previous affiliations of Stephanie A. Tomscha include University of British Columbia & Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council.
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Ecosystem service trade-offs and synergies misunderstood without landscape history
TL;DR: This paper quantified ecosystem service interactions using correlations among contemporary ecosystem services and compared these results to those derived by incorporating change in ecosystem services from an earlier decade, showing how incorporating landscape baselines can influence measured synergies and trade-offs.
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A review of riverine ecosystem service quantification: Research gaps and recommendations
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors highlight conceptual and methodological gaps that have impeded the integration of the ecosystem service concept into management of riverine ecosystems and highlight the need for better inclusion of stakeholders in their quantification protocols.
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The spatial organization of ecosystem services in river‐floodplains
TL;DR: It is found that ES capacity varied considerably with longitudinal position and reach type, and Agricultural capacity was concentrated in lower reaches, high-quality paddle routes in middle-lower reaches, and fish capacity and carbon storage in upper reaches.
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A Guide to Historical Data Sets for Reconstructing Ecosystem Service Change over Time
Stephanie A. Tomscha,Ira J. Sutherland,Delphine Renard,Sarah E. Gergel,Jeanine M. Rhemtulla,Elena M. Bennett,Lori D. Daniels,Ian M.S. Eddy,Emily E. Clark +8 more
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Undervalued and under pressure: A plea for greater attention toward regulating ecosystem services
Ira J. Sutherland,Amy M. Villamagna,Camille Ouellet Dallaire,Elena M. Bennett,Andrew T.M. Chin,Alex C. Y. Yeung,Karl A. Lamothe,Stephanie A. Tomscha,Roland Cormier +8 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors review the complexities associated with regulating ecosystem services (ES) and explore the spatial and temporal variability that influence regulating ES components, including the flow of service benefits.