Spatial patterns of cultural ecosystem services provision in Southern Patagonia

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Spatial patterns of cultural ecosystem services provision in Southern Patagonia. / Martínez Pastur, Guillermo; Peri, Pablo L.; Lencinas, María V. et al.
in: Landscape Ecology, Jahrgang 31, Nr. 2, 01.02.2016, S. 383-399.

Publikation: Beiträge in ZeitschriftenZeitschriftenaufsätzeForschungbegutachtet

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Martínez Pastur G, Peri PL, Lencinas MV, García-Llorente M, Martín-López B. Spatial patterns of cultural ecosystem services provision in Southern Patagonia. Landscape Ecology. 2016 Feb 1;31(2):383-399. Epub 2015 Aug 8. doi: 10.1007/s10980-015-0254-9

Bibtex

@article{8cc176bf351f4aada74275695ec90a23,
title = "Spatial patterns of cultural ecosystem services provision in Southern Patagonia",
abstract = "Context: Although there is a need to develop a spatially explicit methodological approach that addresses the social importance of cultural ecosystem services for regional planning, few studies have analysed the spatial distribution on the cultural ecosystem services based on social perceptions.Objective: The main objective of this study was to identify cultural ecosystem service hot-spots, and factors that characterize such hot-spots and define the spatial associations between cultural ecosystem services in Southern Patagonia (Argentina). Methods: The study was carried out in Southern Patagonia (243.9 thousand km2) located between 46° and 55° SL with the Andes mountains on the western fringe and the Atlantic Ocean on the eastern fringe of the study area. The study region has a range of different vegetation types (grasslands, shrub-lands, peat-lands and forests) though the cold arid steppe is the main vegetation type. We used geo-tagged digital images that local people and visitors posted in the Panoramio web platform to identify hot-spots of four cultural ecosystem services (aesthetic value, existence value, recreation and local identity) and relate these hot-spots with social and biophysical landscape features. Results: Aesthetic value was the main cultural service tagged by people, followed by the existence value for biodiversity conservation, followed by local identity and then recreational activity. The spatial distribution of these cultural ecosystem services are associated with different social and biophysical characteristics, such as the presence of water bodies, vegetation types, marine and terrestrial fauna, protected areas, urbanization, accessibility and tourism offer. The most important factors are the presence of water in Santa Cruz and tourism offer in Tierra del Fuego. Conclusions: Our results demonstrate that this methodology is useful for assessing cultural ecosystem services at the regional scale, especially in areas with low data availability and field accessibility, such as Southern Patagonia. We also identify new research challenges that can be addressed in cultural ecosystem services research through the use of this method.",
keywords = "Aesthetic value, Existence value, Landscape pictures, Local identity, Recreation, Social perceptions, Spatial distribution, Sustainability Science, Landscape pictures, spatial distribution, Social perceptions, Aesthetic value, Existence value, Recreation",
author = "{Mart{\'i}nez Pastur}, Guillermo and Peri, {Pablo L.} and Lencinas, {Mar{\'i}a V.} and Marina Garc{\'i}a-Llorente and Berta Mart{\'i}n-L{\'o}pez",
year = "2016",
month = feb,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1007/s10980-015-0254-9",
language = "English",
volume = "31",
pages = "383--399",
journal = "Landscape Ecology",
issn = "0921-2973",
publisher = "SPB Academic Publishing",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Spatial patterns of cultural ecosystem services provision in Southern Patagonia

AU - Martínez Pastur, Guillermo

AU - Peri, Pablo L.

AU - Lencinas, María V.

AU - García-Llorente, Marina

AU - Martín-López, Berta

PY - 2016/2/1

Y1 - 2016/2/1

N2 - Context: Although there is a need to develop a spatially explicit methodological approach that addresses the social importance of cultural ecosystem services for regional planning, few studies have analysed the spatial distribution on the cultural ecosystem services based on social perceptions.Objective: The main objective of this study was to identify cultural ecosystem service hot-spots, and factors that characterize such hot-spots and define the spatial associations between cultural ecosystem services in Southern Patagonia (Argentina). Methods: The study was carried out in Southern Patagonia (243.9 thousand km2) located between 46° and 55° SL with the Andes mountains on the western fringe and the Atlantic Ocean on the eastern fringe of the study area. The study region has a range of different vegetation types (grasslands, shrub-lands, peat-lands and forests) though the cold arid steppe is the main vegetation type. We used geo-tagged digital images that local people and visitors posted in the Panoramio web platform to identify hot-spots of four cultural ecosystem services (aesthetic value, existence value, recreation and local identity) and relate these hot-spots with social and biophysical landscape features. Results: Aesthetic value was the main cultural service tagged by people, followed by the existence value for biodiversity conservation, followed by local identity and then recreational activity. The spatial distribution of these cultural ecosystem services are associated with different social and biophysical characteristics, such as the presence of water bodies, vegetation types, marine and terrestrial fauna, protected areas, urbanization, accessibility and tourism offer. The most important factors are the presence of water in Santa Cruz and tourism offer in Tierra del Fuego. Conclusions: Our results demonstrate that this methodology is useful for assessing cultural ecosystem services at the regional scale, especially in areas with low data availability and field accessibility, such as Southern Patagonia. We also identify new research challenges that can be addressed in cultural ecosystem services research through the use of this method.

AB - Context: Although there is a need to develop a spatially explicit methodological approach that addresses the social importance of cultural ecosystem services for regional planning, few studies have analysed the spatial distribution on the cultural ecosystem services based on social perceptions.Objective: The main objective of this study was to identify cultural ecosystem service hot-spots, and factors that characterize such hot-spots and define the spatial associations between cultural ecosystem services in Southern Patagonia (Argentina). Methods: The study was carried out in Southern Patagonia (243.9 thousand km2) located between 46° and 55° SL with the Andes mountains on the western fringe and the Atlantic Ocean on the eastern fringe of the study area. The study region has a range of different vegetation types (grasslands, shrub-lands, peat-lands and forests) though the cold arid steppe is the main vegetation type. We used geo-tagged digital images that local people and visitors posted in the Panoramio web platform to identify hot-spots of four cultural ecosystem services (aesthetic value, existence value, recreation and local identity) and relate these hot-spots with social and biophysical landscape features. Results: Aesthetic value was the main cultural service tagged by people, followed by the existence value for biodiversity conservation, followed by local identity and then recreational activity. The spatial distribution of these cultural ecosystem services are associated with different social and biophysical characteristics, such as the presence of water bodies, vegetation types, marine and terrestrial fauna, protected areas, urbanization, accessibility and tourism offer. The most important factors are the presence of water in Santa Cruz and tourism offer in Tierra del Fuego. Conclusions: Our results demonstrate that this methodology is useful for assessing cultural ecosystem services at the regional scale, especially in areas with low data availability and field accessibility, such as Southern Patagonia. We also identify new research challenges that can be addressed in cultural ecosystem services research through the use of this method.

KW - Aesthetic value

KW - Existence value

KW - Landscape pictures

KW - Local identity

KW - Recreation

KW - Social perceptions

KW - Spatial distribution

KW - Sustainability Science

KW - Landscape pictures

KW - spatial distribution

KW - Social perceptions

KW - Aesthetic value

KW - Existence value

KW - Recreation

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84955417132&partnerID=8YFLogxK

U2 - 10.1007/s10980-015-0254-9

DO - 10.1007/s10980-015-0254-9

M3 - Journal articles

VL - 31

SP - 383

EP - 399

JO - Landscape Ecology

JF - Landscape Ecology

SN - 0921-2973

IS - 2

ER -

DOI