Flavio Affinito
ESMO 2024
206-BFO
has realization
b has realization c =Def c realizes b
As for realizes
has realization
059-BFO
realizes
(Elucidation) b realizes c means: b is a process & c is a realizable entity that inheres in d & for all t, if b has participant d at t then c exists at t & the type instantiated by b is correlated with the type instantiated by c
A disposition to go bald is realized in a balding process; a role of student is realized in studying processes; the pumping function of a heart is realized in processes of pumping.
realizes
250-BFO
participates in at some time
b participates in p at some time =Def for some time t (p has participant b at t)
participates in at some time
248-BFO
has participant at some time
p has participant c at some time =Def for some time t (p is a process, c is a continuant, and c participates in p some way at t)
has participant at some time
213-BFO
preceded by
b preceded by c =Def b precedes c
The temporal region occupied by the second half of the match is preceded by the temporal region occupied by the first half of the match.
preceded by
270-BFO
precedes
(Elucidation) If o, o' are occurrents and t is the temporal extent of o and t' is the temporal extent of o' then o precedes o' means: either last instant of o is before first instant of o' or last instant of o = first instant of o' and neither o nor o' are temporal instants
The temporal region occupied by Mary's birth precedes the temporal region occupied by Mary's death. NOTE 1: Each temporal region is its own temporal extent. The temporal extent of a spatiotemporal region is the temporal region it temporally projects onto. The temporal extent of a process or process boundary that occupies temporal region t is t. NOTE 2: Precedes defines a strict partial order on occurrents.
precedes
143-BFO
occurs in
b occurs in c =Def b is a process or a process boundary and c is a material entity or immaterial entity & there exists a spatiotemporal region r and b occupies spatiotemporal region r & for all t, if b exists at t then c exists at t & there exist spatial regions s and s' where b spatially projects onto s at t & c occupies spatial region s' at t & s is a continuant part of s' at t
A process of digestion occurs in the interior of an organism, a process of loading artillery rounds into a tank cannon occurs in the interior of the tank.
occurs in
235-BFO
located in at all times
b located in c at all times =Def for all times t, b exists at t implies (b and c are independent continuants and not spatial regions, and the spatial region which b occupies at t is a (proper or improper) continuant part of the spatial region which c occupies at t)
located in at all times
118-BFO
exists at
(Elucidation) exists at is a relation between a particular and some temporal region at which the particular exists
First World War exists at 1914-1916, Mexico exists at January 1, 2000.
exists at
223-BFO
has continuant part at all times
b has continuant part c at all times =Def for all times t, b exists at t implies (b and c are continuants & b is a part of c at t)
has continuant part at all times
227-BFO
has proper continuant part at all times
b has proper continuant part c at all times =Def c proper continuant part of b at all times
has proper continuant part at all times
243-BFO
has material basis at all times
b has material basis c at all times =Def For all times t, b exists at t implies (b is a disposition & c is a material entity & there is some d bearer of b & c continuant part of d at t & d has disposition b because c continuant part of d at t)
has material basis at all times
230-BFO
has member part at some time
b has member part c at some time =Def for some time t (c member part of b at t)
has member part at some time
202-BFO
has occurrent part
(Elucidation) b has occurrent part c means: c is a part of b & b and c are occurrents
Mary's life has occurrent part Mary's 5th birthday.
has occurrent part
154-BFO
has proper occurrent part
b has proper occurrent part c =Def b has occurrent part c & b and c are not identical
As for has occurrent part.
has proper occurrent part
211-BFO
has temporal part
b has temporal part c =Def c temporal part of b
Your life has temporal part the first year of your life.
has temporal part
236-BFO
location of at some time
b location of c at some time =Def for some time t (c located in b at t)
location of at some time
228-BFO
member part of at some time
b member part of c at some time =Def for some time t (b is an object & there is at t a mutually exhaustive and pairwise disjoint partition of c into objects x1, ..., xn (for some n ≠ 1) with b = xi (for some 1 <= i <= n))
member part of at some time
003-BFO
occurrent part of
(Elucidation) b occurrent part of c =Def c has occurrent part b
Mary's 5th birthday is an occurrent part of Mary's life; the first set of the tennis match is an occurrent part of the tennis match.
occurrent part of
116-BFO
proper temporal part of
b proper temporal part of c =Def b temporal part of c & not (b = c)
As for temporal part of.
proper temporal part of
225-BFO
proper continuant part of at all times
b proper continuant part of c at all times =Def for all times t, b exists at t implies (b continuant part of c at t & not (c proper continuant part of b at t))
proper continuant part of at all times
005-BFO
proper occurrent part of
b proper occurrent part of c =Def b occurrent part of c & b and c are not identical
As for occurrent part of.
proper occurrent part of
078-BFO
temporal part of
b temporal part of c =Def b occurrent part of c & either b and c are temporal regions or b and c are spatiotemporal regions & b temporally projects onto an occurrent part of the temporal region that c temporally projects onto or b and c are processes or process boundaries & b occupies a temporal region that is an occurrent part of the temporal region that c occupies
Your heart beating from 4pm to 5pm today is a temporal part of the process of your heart beating; the 4th year of your life is a temporal part of your life, as is the process boundary which separates the 3rd and 4th years of your life; the first quarter of a game of football is a temporal part of the whole game.
temporal part of
080-BFO
temporally projects onto
(Elucidation) temporally projects onto is a relation between a spatiotemporal region s and some temporal region which is the temporal extent of s
The world line of a particle temporally projects onto the temporal region extending from the beginning to the end of the existence of the particle.
temporally projects onto
251-BFO
participates in at all times
b participates in p at all times =Def for all times t, b exists at t implies (p has participant b at t)
participates in at all times
249-BFO
has participant at all times
p has participant c at all times =Def for all times t, p exists at t implies (p is a process, c is a continuant, and c participates in p some way at t)
has participant at all times
237-BFO
location of at all times
b location of c at all times =Def for all times t, b exists at t implies (c located in b at t)
location of at all times
234-BFO
located in at some time
b located in c at some time =Def for some time t (b and c are independent continuants and not spatial regions, and the spatial region which b occupies at t is a (proper or improper) continuant part of the spatial region which c occupies at t)
located in at some time
231-BFO
has member part at all times
b has member part c at all times =Def for all times t, b exists at t implies (c member part b at t)
has member part at all times
229-BFO
member part of at all times
b member part of c at all times =Def for all times t, b exists at t implies (b is an object & c is an object aggregate & there is at t a mutually exhaustive and pairwise disjoint partition of c into objects x1,..., xn (for some n ≠ 1) with b = xi (for some 1 <= i <= n))
member part of at all times
226-BFO
has proper continuant part at some time
b has proper continuant part c at some time =Def c proper continuant part of b at some time
has proper continuant part at some time
224-BFO
proper continuant part of at some time
b proper continuant part of c at some time =Def for some time t (b continuant part of c at t & not (c continuant part of b at t)
proper continuant part of at some time
221-BFO
continuant part of at some time
b continuant part of c at some time =Def for some time t (b exists at t and c exists at t and b continuant part of c at t & t is a temporal region & b and c are continuants)
Milk teeth continuant part of human at some time; surgically removed tumour continuant part of organism at some time.
continuant part of at some time
222-BFO
continuant part of at all times
b continuant part of c at all times =Def for all times t, (b exists at t, implies b continuant part of c at t & t is a temporal region & b and c are continuants)
Centre of mass of a material entity continuant part of material entity at all times; continuant fiat external boundary of an object continuant part of object at all times.
continuant part of at all times
271-BFO
has continuant part at some time
b has continuant part c at some time =Def for some time t (b and c are continuants & b is a part of c at t)
has continuant part at some time
212-BFO
has proper temporal part
b has proper temporal part c =Def c proper temporal part of b
As for has temporal part.
has proper temporal part
267-BFO
environs
b environs c =Def c occurs in b
Mouth environs process of mastication, city environs traffic.
environs
260-BFO
specifically depended on by
s-depended on by
b s-depended on by c =Def c specifically depends on b
Coloured object s-depended on by colour.
specifically depended on by
012-BFO
specifically depends on
s-depends on
(Elucidation) b specifically depends on c means: b and c do not share common parts & b is of a nature such that at all times t it cannot exist at t unless c exists at t & b is not a boundary of c
A shape s-depends on the shaped object, hue, saturation and brightness of a colour sample s-depend on each other.
specifically depends on
The analogue of s-dependence for occurrents is has participant.
053-BFO
bearer of
b bearer of c =Def c inheres in b
A patch of ink is the bearer of a colour quality; an organism is the bearer of a temperature quality.
bearer of
051-BFO
inheres in
b inheres in c =Def b is a specifically dependent continuant & c is an independent continuant that is not a spatial region & b s-depends on c
A shape inheres in a shaped object; a mass inheres in a material entity.
inheres in
132-BFO
occupies temporal region
p occupies temporal region t =Def the spatiotemporal region occupied by p temporally projects onto t
The Second World War occupies the temporal region September 1, 1939 - September 2, 1945.
occupies temporal region
082-BFO
occupies spatiotemporal region
(Elucidation) p occupies spatiotemporal region s is a relation between an occurrent p and the spatiotemporal region s which is its spatiotemporal extent
A particle emitted by a nuclear reactor occupies the spatiotemporal region which is its trajectory.
occupies spatiotemporal region
232-BFO
occupies spatial region at some time
an independent continuant c that is not a spatial region occupies spatial region r at some time =Def for some time t (every continuant part of c occupies some continuant part of r at t and no continuant part of c occupies any spatial region that is not a continuant part of r at t)
occupies spatial region at some time
233-BFO
occupies spatial region at all times
an independent continuant c that is not a spatial region occupies spatial region r at all times =Def for all times t, b exists at t implies (every continuant part of c occupies some continuant part of r at t and no continuant part of c occupies any spatial region that is not a continuant part of r at t)
occupies spatial region at all times
246-BFO
spatially projects onto at some time
b spatially projects onto c at some time =Def for some time t (b is a spatiotemporal region and c is a spatial region and c is the spatial extent of b at t)
spatially projects onto at some time
247-BFO
spatially projects onto at all times
b spatially projects onto c at all times =Def for all times t, b exists at t implies (b is a spatiotemporal region and c is a spatial region and c is the spatial extent of b at t)
spatially projects onto at all times
242-BFO
has material basis at some time
b has material basis c at some time =Def For some time t (b is a disposition & c is a material entity & there is some d bearer of b & c continuant part of d at t & d has disposition b because c continuant part of d at t)
has material basis at some time
A relationship that holds between an actor or an actor aggregate and the value of a commodity or human activity from which they derive some benefit
fisher benefits from income
The intent is that the process branch of the causal property hierarchy is primary (causal relations hold between occurrents/processes), and that the material branch is defined in terms of the process branch
p is causally related to q if and only if p or any part of p and q or any part of q are linked by a chain of events where each event pair is one where the execution of p influences the execution of q. p may be upstream, downstream, part of, or a container of q.
The entity or characteristic A is causally upstream of the entity or characteristic B, A having an effect on B. An entity corresponds to any biological type of entity as long as a mass is measurable. A characteristic corresponds to a particular specificity of an entity (e.g., phenotype, shape, size).
relation that links two events, processes, states, or objects such that one event, process, state, or object (a cause) contributes to the production of another event, process, state, or object (an effect) where the cause is partly or wholly responsible for the effect, and the effect is partly or wholly dependent on the cause.
car crash causally related to drunk driving
p is causally upstream of q iff p is causally related to q, the end of p precedes the end of q, and p is not an occurrent part of q.
p is causally upstream of, negative effect q iff p is casually upstream of q, and the execution of p decreases the execution of q.
p is 'causally upstream or within' q iff p is causally related to q, and the end of p precedes, or is coincident with, the end of q.
Definition from IAO_0000115 taken in ro-eco.owl
p has output c iff c is a participant in p, c is present at the end of p, and c is not present in the same state at the beginning of p.
photosynthesis has outpu oxygen
b has quality c =Def c quality of b
tree has quality height, phone has quality price
b measure_of c: b is a BFO entity (usually a process or material entity) that has a data property that can serve as a measure of c some EESV class.
The number/mass of wildcaught fish is a measure of the EESV class Use. The abundance of whales in an area is a measure of the EESV class ecological supply.
p output of c iff p is a participant in c, p is present at the end of c, and p is not present in the same state at the beginning of c.
carbon dioxide output of respiration
001-BFO
entity
(Elucidation) An entity is anything that exists or has existed or will exist
Julius Caesar, the Second World War, your body mass index, Verdi's Requiem.
entity
008-BFO
continuant
(Elucidation) A continuant is an entity that persists, endures, or continues to exist through time while maintaining its identity
A human being, a tennis ball, a cave, a region of space, someone's temperature.
continuant
077-BFO
occurrent
(Elucidation) An occurrent is an entity that unfolds itself in time or it is the start or end of such an entity or it is a temporal or spatiotemporal region
As for process, history, process boundary, spatiotemporal region, zero-dimensional temporal region, one-dimensional temporal region, temporal interval, temporal instant.
occurrent
017-BFO
independent continuant
b is an independent continuant =Def b is a continuant which is such that there is no c such that b s-depends on c and no c such that b g-depends on c
An atom, a molecule, an organism, a heart, a chair, the bottom right portion of a human torso, a leg; the interior of your mouth; a spatial region; an orchestra.
independent continuant
035-BFO
spatial region
(Elucidation) A spatial region is a continuant entity that is a continuant part of the spatial projection of a portion of spacetime at a given time
As for zero-dimensional spatial region, one-dimensional spatial region, two-dimensional spatial region, three-dimensional spatial region.
spatial region
100-BFO
temporal region
(Elucidation) A temporal region is an occurrent over which processes can unfold
As for zero-dimensional temporal region and one-dimensional temporal region.
temporal region
039-BFO
two-dimensional spatial region
(Elucidation) A two-dimensional spatial region is a spatial region that is a whole consisting of a surface together with zero or more surfaces and/or spatial regions of lower dimension as parts
The surface of a sphere-shaped part of space, an infinitely thin plane in space.
two-dimensional spatial region
095-BFO
spatiotemporal region
(Elucidation) A spatiotemporal region is an occurrent that is an occurrent part of spacetime
The spatiotemporal region occupied by the development of a cancer tumour, the spatiotemporal region occupied by an orbiting satellite.
spatiotemporal region
'Spacetime' here refers to the maximal instance of the universal spatiotemporal region.
083-BFO
process
(Elucidation) p is a process means p is an occurrent that has some temporal proper part and for some time t, p has some material entity as participant at t
An act of selling, the life of an organism, a process of sleeping, a process of cell-division, a beating of the heart, a process of meiosis, the taxiing of an aircraft, the programming of a computer.
process
058-BFO
realizable entity
(Elucidation) b is a realizable entity means: b is a specifically dependent continuant that inheres in some independent continuant which is not a spatial region and is of a type some instances of which are realized in processes of a correlated type
The role of being a doctor, the role of this boundary to delineate where Utah and Colorado meet, the function of your reproductive organs, the disposition of your blood to coagulate, the disposition of this piece of metal to conduct electricity.
realizable entity
037-BFO
zero-dimensional spatial region
(Elucidation) A zero-dimensional spatial region is one or a collection of more than one spatially disjoint points in space
The spatial region occupied at some time instant by the North Pole.
zero-dimensional spatial region
055-BFO
quality
(Elucidation) a quality is a specifically dependent continuant that, in contrast to roles and dispositions, does not require any further process in order to be realized
The colour of a tomato, the ambient temperature of this portion of air, the length of the circumference of your waist, the shape of your nose, the shape of your nostril, the mass of this piece of gold.
quality
050-BFO
specifically dependent continuant
b is a specifically dependent continuant =Def b is a continuant & there is some independent continuant c which is not a spatial region & which is such that b s-depends on c
(with one bearer) The mass of this tomato, the pink colour of a medium rare piece of grilled filet mignon at its centre, the smell of this portion of mozzarella, the disposition of this fish to decay, the role of being a doctor, the function of this heart: to pump blood, the shape of this hole; (with multiple bearers:) John's love for Mary, the ownership relation between John and this statue, the relation of authority between John and his subordinates.
specifically dependent continuant
On the multiple bearers case, see relational quality.
061-BFO
role
externally-grounded realizable entity
(Elucidation) b is a role means: b is a realizable entity & b exists because there is some single bearer that is in some special physical, social, or institutional set of circumstances in which this bearer does not have to be & b is not such that, if it ceases to exist, then the physical make-up of the bearer is thereby changed
The priest role, the student role, the role of subject in a clinical trial, the role of a stone in marking a property boundary, the role of a boundary to demarcate two neighbouring administrative territories, the role of a building in serving as a military target.
role
027-BFO
fiat object part
(Elucidation) a fiat object part b is a material entity which is such that for all times t, if b exists at t then there is some object c such that b is a proper continuant part of c at t and b is demarcated from the remainder of c by one or more fiat surfaces
The upper and lower lobes of the left lung, the dorsal and ventral surfaces of the body, the Western hemisphere of the Earth, the FMA:regional parts of an intact human body.
fiat object part
038-BFO
one-dimensional spatial region
(Elucidation) A one-dimensional spatial region is a whole consisting of a line together with zero or more lines and/or points as parts
An edge of a cube-shaped portion of space, a line connecting two points, two parallel lines extended in space.
one-dimensional spatial region
025-BFO
object aggregate
(Elucidation) an object aggregate is a material entity consisting exactly of a plurality (≥1) of objects as member parts which together form a unit
The aggregate of the musicians in a symphony orchestra and their instruments, the aggregate of bearings in a constant velocity axle joint, the nitrogen atoms in the atmosphere, a collection of cells in a blood biobank. NOTE 1: 'Exactly' means that there are no parts of the object aggregate other than its member parts. NOTE 2: The unit can, at certain times, consist of exactly one object, for example, when a wolf litter loses all but one of its pups, but it must at some time have a plurality of member parts.
object aggregate
040-BFO
three-dimensional spatial region
(Elucidation) A three-dimensional spatial region is a whole consisting of a spatial volume together with zero or more spatial volumes and/or spatial regions of lower dimension as parts
A cube-shaped region of space, a sphere-shaped region of space, the region of space occupied by all and only the planets in the solar system at some point in time.
three-dimensional spatial region
034-BFO
site
(Elucidation) b is a site means: b is a three-dimensional immaterial entity whose boundaries either (1) (partially or wholly) coincide with the boundaries of one or more material entities or (2) have locations determined in relation to some material entity
A hole in a portion of cheese, a rabbit hole, the Grand Canyon, the Piazza San Marco, the kangaroo-joey-containing hole of a kangaroo pouch, your left nostril (a fiat part - the opening - of your left nasal cavity), the lumen of your gut, the hold of a ship, the interior of the trunk of your car, hole in an engineered floor joist; An air traffic control region of type A is determined in terms of elevation above mean sea level of lower and upper boundaries.
site
024-BFO
object
(Elucidation) an object is a material entity which manifests causal unity & is of a type instances of which are maximal relative to the sort of causal unity manifested
An organism, a fish tank, a planet, a laptop, a valve, a block of marble, an ice cube.
object
A description of three primary sorts of causal unity is provided in Basic Formal Ontology 2.0. Specification and User’s Guide
084-BFO
process boundary
p is a process boundary =Def p is a temporal part of a process & p has no proper temporal parts
The boundary between the 2nd and 3rd year of your life.
process boundary
103-BFO
one-dimensional temporal region
(Elucidation) A one-dimensional temporal region is a temporal region is a whole that has a temporal interval and zero or more temporal intervals and temporal instants as parts
The temporal region during which a process occurs.
one-dimensional temporal region
019-BFO
material entity
(Elucidation) A material entity is an independent continuant that at all times at which it exists has some portion of matter as continuant part
A human being, the undetached arm of a human being, an aggregate of human beings.
material entity
028-BFO
immaterial entity
a is an immaterial entity =Def a is an independent continuant which is such that there is no time t when it has a material entity as continuant part at t
As for fiat point, fiat line, fiat surface, site.
immaterial entity
102-BFO
zero-dimensional temporal region
(Elucidation) A zero-dimensional temporal region is a temporal region that is a whole consisting of one or more separated temporal instants as parts
A temporal region that is occupied by a process boundary; the moment at which a finger is detached in an industrial accident.
zero-dimensional temporal region
155-BFO
temporal interval
(Elucidation) a temporal interval is a one-dimensional temporal region that is continuous, thus without gaps or breaks
The year 2018.
temporal interval
A one-dimensional temporal region can include as parts not only temporal intervals but also temporal instants separated from other parts by gaps.
209-BFO
temporal instant
(Elucidation) a temporal instant is a zero-dimensional temporal region that has no proper temporal part
The millennium.
temporal instant
The non-living components that form part of an ecosystem.
A river, a lake, soil
An individual entity within a social-ecological system that performs actions or makes decisions impacting the system's dynamics and outcomes.
Is a material entity consisting exactly of a plurality (≥1) of actors as member parts which together form a unit.
A local community, a group of fishers
Any human-made or human-influenced object that contributes to human well-being and economic activity.
A fishing boat, fertiliser, infrastructure
Is a material entity consisting exactly of a plurality (≥1) of anthropogenic assets as member parts which together form a unit.
A fishing fleet, all the paths in a provincial park
The control of pests such as insects, mites, weeds and plant diseases by other organisms.
A process involving the generation of organic material through biological growth.
The living components that form part of an ecosystem.
A maple tree, a horse
A biochemical process in which inorganic carbon, typically in the form of carbon dioxide, is converted into organic compounds by living organisms, primarily through photosynthesis.
Water from natural sources, such as rivers, lakes, or aquifers, that is free from harmful contaminants and pollutants, making it safe for consumption, agricultural use, and supporting aquatic ecosystems. It is characterized by low levels of pathogens, chemicals, and physical impurities, ensuring it meets health and environmental standards.
A type of economic actor who participates in the commercial fishing activity.
An economic activity that involves the harvesting of wild fish for the purpose of generating economic gain through the sale of catch on the market.
Commercial cod fishing, commercial salmon fishing
Marketable product produced as a result of human economic activity.
A smoked salmon
Is a material entity consisting exactly of a plurality (≥1) of commodities as member parts which together form a unit.
The wheat of France
A concept is an entity that is conceived in the human mind to represent an abstract of generic idea generalised from particular instances.
A thought, a notion, courage
These are the services that contribute to the benefits people obtain from ecosystems through spiritual enrichment, cognitive development, reflection, recreation, and aesthetic experiences.
Recreation services, aesthetic appreciation
Those types of relational values that are associated with a local culture and context.
Breakdown of complex organic substances into simpler molecules or ions by physical, chemical and/or biological processes.
A driver of change that directly and unequivocally influences an ecosystem and its processes.
Exploitation
Any natural or human induced factor that directly or indirectly causes a change in an ecosystem.
Global warming, flooding, pollution
The efforts that humans invest to enhance ecological supply and to make use of ecosystem services.
Infrastructure to access national parks, a fishing fleet, machinery
The explicitly or implicitly expressed human desire or need for an ecosystem service, in terms of its quantity or quality, irrespective of whether awareness exists about such need.
Population in dependent on a watershed, per capita consumption of a good
The ecosystem structure and functions that underlie the potential capacity of ecosystems to provide ecosystem services.
Fish biomass, pollinator abundance, freshwater supply
The importance of an ecosystem service to societies or individuals as a means to achieve a specific end.
Income, food, enjoyment
The importance ascribed to how ecosystems contribute to desirable and meaningful interactions between humans and nature and between humans in relation to nature.
Cultural practices of stewardship, care, spirituality
The active or passive appropriation of an ecosystem service by people highlights the actual appropriation of benefits from nature.
Harvested crops, recreational experience
A human activity involving the production, distribution, exchange or consumption of commodities and services with the goal of meeting human needs and generating monetary instrumental value in the economy.
Commercial farming, scuba diving
An actor who participates in economic activity and who's behaviour and decisions are dependent on economic concerns, ie are tied to monetary considerations.
A consumer, a merchant
A dynamic complex of plant, animal and micro-organism communities and their non-living environment interacting as a functional unit. Specifically, ecosystems are made up of living components (biotic complexes and assemblages of species), the abiotic environment, the processes and interactions within and between the biotic and abiotic components, and the physical space in which these operate
The components that are part of an ecosystem.
A tree, a fish, a river
A measure of the state or health of an ecosystem, characterized by its structure, function, composition, and the ability to sustain biodiversity and provide ecosystem services. It reflects the level of ecological integrity, resilience to disturbances, and the extent to which the ecosystem supports its natural processes and life forms.
A healthy ecosystem, a degraded ecosystem
The size of an ecosystem, which are contiguous spaces of a specific ecosystem type characterized by a distinct set of biotic and abiotic components and their interactions.
They are the subset of ecosystem processes which contribute to human wellbeing through the production of ecosystem goods. Ecosystem functions refer to the broad, overarching roles that ecosystems perform, which support the stability and health of the environment. Functions are often described in terms of their benefits to human societies and the natural world.
Pollination, primary production
The output of an ecosystem function before it is used in human activity. Components of nature, directly enjoyed, consumed, or used to yield human well-being. The ecosystem good (i.e., ecological end-product) is a biophysical quality and needs minimal translation for relevance to human well-being.
Freshwater, harvestable tree, fish
Is a material entity consisting exactly of a plurality (≥1) of ecosystem goods as member parts which together form a unit.
A population of salmon, a group trees
The flow of energy and materials through the biotic and abiotic components of an ecosystem. Ecosystem processes are the specific mechanisms or actions through which ecosystem functions are achieved. These are the dynamic interactions and transformations that occur within ecosystems, leading to the maintenance and sustainability of ecosystem functions.
Photosynthesis, predation
In ESMO ecosystem services are roles that ecosystems can bear by virtue of their composition and the processes and functions that arise in them. This role is realised by both the ecosystem function underpinning the service and the human activity that depends on the ecosystem good.
A service that is provided by an ecosystem as an intrinsic property of its functionality (e.g. pollination, nutrient cycling, nitrogen fixation, fruit and seed dispersal) contributing to the benefits (and occasionally disbenefits) that people obtain from ecosystems.
A non-monetary instrumental value where the achieved end is some form of enjoyment.
The value of a river in recreational enjoyment
For additional detailed information refer to Keith, D.A., Ferrer-Paris, J.R., Nicholson, E. and Kingsford, R.T. (eds.) (2020). The IUCN Global Ecosystem Typology 2.0: Descriptive profiles for biomes and ecosystem functional groups. Gland, Switzerland: IUCN.
The epipelagic or euphotic zone of the open ocean is the uppermost layer that is penetrated by enough light to support photosynthesis.
North Atlantic ocean waters
For more see Balvanera, P., Brauman, K.A., Cord, A.F., Drakou, E.G., Geijzendorffer, I.R., Karp, D.S., Martín-López, B., Mwampamba, T.H. and Schröter, M., 2022. Essential ecosystem
EESV classes represent shared and grouped key attributes for all ecosystem services to be monitored across space and time.
The consumptive use of any natural resources.
Overfishing, over hunting
Those biotic components that are part of the kingdom Animalia
A dolphin, a chimpanzee, a parrot
The generation of fish biomass through predation and other ecological processes.
Is a material entity consisting exactly of a plurality (≥1) of fish as member parts which together form a unit.
Salmon population
Is a vessel aggregate where all vessel types are fishing vessels, ie whose primary purpose is to catch fish.
Those biotic components that are part of the kingdom Plantae
A fern, an apple tree
A non-monetary instrumental value where the achieved end is a food source.
The value of cereal in contributing to food security, the value of fish as a food source
The provision of living space for resident and migratory species.
A group of individuals residing together and engaging in collective economic activities and decision-making, such as consumption, production, and resource management
Any intentional action or series of actions performed by humans that influence or alter the state of social, economic, or ecological systems, often involving the use of resources, the production of commodities, or the provision of services.
A driver of change that operates diffusely by altering one or more direct drivers.
Climate change
A type of anthropogenic asset comprising the physical and organizational systems designed and constructed by humans to support societal functions, economic activities, and the provision of services.
A road, a sea wall, a bridge
For more, see Pascual, U., Balvanera, P., Díaz, S., Pataki, G., Roth, E., Stenseke, M., Watson, R.T., Dessane, E.B., Islar, M., Kelemen, E. and Maris, V., 2017. Valuing nature’s contributions to people: the IPBES approach. Current opinion in environmental sustainability, 26, pp.7-16.
The value attributed to something as a means to achieving a particular end
For more, see Pascual, U., Balvanera, P., Díaz, S., Pataki, G., Roth, E., Stenseke, M., Watson, R.T., Dessane, E.B., Islar, M., Kelemen, E. and Maris, V., 2017. Valuing nature’s contributions to people: the IPBES approach. Current opinion in environmental sustainability, 26, pp.7-16.
The inherent value, that is the value something has independent of any human experience or evaluation. Such a value is viewed as an inherent property of the entity and not ascribed or generated by external valuing agents
Existence value
An instrumental value where the end achieved is monetary gain.
The value in USD
The total mass of carbon taken out of the atmosphere by plant photosynthesis (Gross Primary Production) minus return to the atmosphere of carbon due to autotrophic respiration.
A human activity that serves social, cultural, recreational or environmental purposes and does not involve the production, distribution, or consumption of commodities and services for economic gain.
Subsistence farming, hiking
An actor who participates in non-economic activity and who's behaviour and decisions are independent from economic concerns, ie are not tied to monetary considerations.
An instrumental value where the end achieved is not monetary gain.
The processes by which elements are extracted from their mineral, aquatic, or atmospheric sources or recycled from their organic forms, converting them to the ionic form in which biotic uptake occurs and ultimately returning them to the atmosphere, water, or soil.
For additional detailed information refer to Keith, D.A., Ferrer-Paris, J.R., Nicholson, E. and Kingsford, R.T. (eds.) (2020). The IUCN Global Ecosystem Typology 2.0: Descriptive profiles for biomes and ecosystem functional groups. Gland, Switzerland: IUCN.
Small-medium lowland rivers are productive depositional ecosystems with trophic webs that are less diverse than large lowland rivers.
Rio Carrao in Venezuela
The metabolic pathways for CO2 fixation by plants.
The introduction of contaminants into the natural environment that cause adverse change.
Heavy metal contamination, air pollution
A biological process in which one organism, the predator, hunts, captures, and consumes another organism, the prey, as a means of obtaining energy and nutrients.
These are the services that contribute to the products obtained from ecosystems.
Food provisioning services, timber provisioning services, freshwater provisioning services
These are the services that contribute to the benefits obtained from the regulation of ecosystem processes.
Pollination services, flood prevention services
For more, see Pascual, U., Balvanera, P., Díaz, S., Pataki, G., Roth, E., Stenseke, M., Watson, R.T., Dessane, E.B., Islar, M., Kelemen, E. and Maris, V., 2017. Valuing nature’s contributions to people: the IPBES approach. Current opinion in environmental sustainability, 26, pp.7-16.
Values that do not directly emanate from nature but are derivative of our relationships with it and our responsibilities towards it.
Spiritual value, cultural value
A biological process by which organisms produce offspring, ensuring the continuation of their species to pass on genetic material to the next generation.
Sexual reproduction, asexual reproduction
A type of infrastrucure specifically designed to support human activities requiring river access.
A potoon, a boat launch, a road to the river
A type of non-economic actor who participates in the swimming activity.
A non-economic activity that involves the act of swimming for the purpose of recreation without revenue generation
A type of economic actor who participates in a touristic activity as a provider.
A whale watching tour operator.
A principle associated with a given worldview or cultural context, a preference someone has, the importance of something for itself or for others, or simply as a means to an end.
Is a material entity consisting exactly of a plurality (≥1) of vessels as member parts which together form a unit.
A fishing fleet
A vessel strike is a collision between any type of boat and a marine animal in the ocean.
The continuous increase in temperature relative to a historical baseline.
The removal of sediments and nutrients and other impurities from water.
The role of an ecosystem in regulating pollutants and excess nutrients to maintain the chemical condition of water to mitigate harmful effects on human health.
The provision of living space for whale species
Is a material entity consisting exactly of a plurality (≥1) of whales as member parts which together form a unit.
Orca population
A type of economic actor who participates in the whale watching activity as a client.
An economic activity that involves the observation of whales.
Is a vessel aggregate where all vessel types are whale watching vessels, ie whose primary purpose is to take people to observe whales.
The monetary value of a product paid by retailers before being marked up and sold to consumers.
The role of an ecosystem in contributing to the growth of fish and other aquatic biomass that are captured in uncultivated production contexts for various uses, primarily food production.
Is a material entity consisting exactly of a plurality (≥1) of wild caught fish as member parts which together form a unit.
Landed tuna, landed sardines
The role of an ecosystem in enabling people to enjoy wildlife through direct, in-situ, observations.
51907.9043
2000
66245.72922
2001
57899.99048
2002
78181.28889
2003
57974.43614
2004
52715.09282
2005
69591.42064
2006
47915.13832
2007
46286.44842
2008
49749.82983
2009
52486.05582
2010
43185.58947
2011
31571.89075
2012
45522.46667
2013
46031.24747
2014
69967.76381
2015
49724.60707
2016
31383.07576
2017
19946.05556
2018
686.0
2019
1922.0
2020
0.0
2021
nan
1997
nan
1998
54575.67143
1999
72581.0
2000
102048.0
2001
261938.0
2002
326606.0
2003
376769.0
2004
330606.0001
2005
274170.0
2006
193289.0
2007
152176.0
2008
138064.0
2009
174981.0
2010
227292.0
2011
154506.0
2012
119619.0
2013
310649.0
2014
177568.0
2015
207932.0
2016
179413.0
2017
116051.0
2018
117593.0
2019
88414.0
2020
92385.0
2021
nan
1997
nan
1998
116815.0
1999
164
2000
156
2001
158
2002
164
2003
166
2004
176
2005
178
2006
172
2007
170
2008
170
2009
172
2010
174
2011
168
2012
165
2013
156
2014
162
2015
166
2016
154
2017
150
2018
146
2019
144
2020
148
2021
178
1998
170
1999
nan
2000
nan
2001
nan
2002
nan
2003
nan
2004
4593.0
2005
6280.0
2006
4911.0
2007
3926.0
2008
3705.0
2009
3959.0
2010
4559.0
2011
4359.0
2012
3312.0
2013
4681.0
2014
3959.0
2015
4698.0
2016
3266.0
2017
3881.0
2018
1545.0
2019
2239.0
2020
921.0
2021
nan
1997
nan
1998
nan
1999
0.014
2000
0.013
2001
0.018
2002
0.004
2004
0.006333333
2005
0.006
2006
0.009
2007
0.016
2008
0.00675
2010
0.009125
2011
0.0164875
2012
0.0127
2013
0.01095
2014
0.005475
2015
0.0072
2016
0.012785714
2017
0.014014286
2018
0.006666667
2019
0.0194
2020
0.010333333
1987
0.013
1988
0.01175
1989
0.016333333
1990
0.009166667
1991
0.0085
1992
0.013
1993
0.008
1994
0.007
1995
0.024
1997
0.016
1998
0.016
1999
5.3
2000
5.1
2001
11.8
2002
17.3
2003
26.9
2004
24.9
2005
29.2
2006
23.8
2007
18.4
2008
16.1
2009
18.5
2010
21.4
2011
18.99999998
2012
12.3
2013
25.0
2014
25.0
2015
26.6
2016
26.58
2017
17.75
2018
16.2
2019
16.49
2020
25.89
2021
7.7
1997
9.200000001
1998
6.600000001
1999