Fig. 3 illustrates in detail that the indicative economic impacts described in Table 2 interact with provisioning ecosystem services (Table 3). The economic impact is related to the social impact in terms of economic activities, material well-being and the prosperity of the community (Vanclay, 2002), with provisioning services obtaining to the products people derive from ecosystems (MA, 2003). In this respect, the results suggest that following societal demands are of high relevance and enhance the material well-being of the people. This includes security of income, economic prosperity and the resilience of the region, the maintenance of agricultural and grassland areas as well as food security and drinking water supply. These demands are fulfilled by provisioning ecosystem services: food, forage and green energy production and fresh water retention, for drinking water extraction or agricultural use. Within the stakeholder dialogue, the provisioning ecosystem services build up a basis for the regional economy, especially characterized by the provision of products. The indicative economic impacts support the importance of the provisioning services which are strong supply directed needs.