Using an integrated approach to ecosystem management involves managing for and balancing multiple objectives under potentially conflicting circumstances and includes management of multiple species, sites and services. An integrated management plan combines objectives for the protection and conservation of ecologically important sites, key species, sustainable fisheries, key habitats and the management of threats such as oil spills and maritime traffic in a prescribed area or space. Using an ecosystem services perspective is a key component of EBM and important for planners and managers when establishing priorities for management. Priorities can be determined by focusing on the areas and habitats that deliver the greatest amount of ecosystem services, or the ecosystem services of highest value.
Here, ecosystems are valued not exclusively for the basic goods they generate (such as food or raw materials) but also for the important services they provide (including clean water and protection from natural disturbances), while incorporating their economic, social, and cultural values. EBM requires identifying and addressing cumulative and at times additive or synergistic impacts of various activities that might affect the ability of an ecosystem to maintain healthy, productive, and resilient3. Analyzing impacts according to their causes allows for a tailored management response, while the suite of management responses taken under EBM needs to be considered as a whole, with management choices evaluated as trade-offs when they overlap.